Z-Burbia 7: Sisters of the Apocalypse
Page 11
Well, fuck a duck in the butt. I ain't got a clue of what to do next.
Good thing life is funny and decides to hand me an answer. Maybe not a full answer, but enough of one for me to pay attention.
One of the tents opens and about six guards come out with their rifles pointed at Audrey. She's pretty bloody, her face all swollen and shit, but she's walking just fine, even with heavy manacles on her ankles and wrists. I have a feeling one of the Doyles got a little fresh and found out the hard way what happens when you try to stick your hand in a sister's pants when she doesn't want you to. I wonder if she killed the shitfucker or just made him rethink his life choices. Probably the last part or she'd be dead.
Audrey keeps her head down, but I can tell she's scanning the area. Her eyes are darting left and right. She stumbles and half the Doyle guards look like they're going to shoot her. Maybe she hurt more than just one of them. They're scared shitless enough.
None of them touch her. They wait until she gets to her feet. Then she does something that surprises even me. She looks right at me. No way she can see me, but it sure as fuck looks like she can. Then she turns her head and stares off to my right before one of the Doyles gets the balls to give her a shove with the barrel of his rifle.
Audrey stumbles a bit then shuffles along towards the middle row of tents. I bet that's where the commander is. They've tagged her as the leader of my sisters and now she's being taken to chat with their leader. I don't know if that buys me more time or if her time is about up. You never know with crazies. I sure as shit hope it buys me more time.
The image of her staring at me makes me shiver. Why the hell did she do that? Did she somehow catch a reflection off my binoculars? No way. Not these things. Anti-reflective surface. All of our binoculars and scopes have it. What the fuck? And what was she staring at after she locked onto me?
I slowly shift my body and turn my binoculars on the landscape around me. I instantly see movement about fifty yards away to my right. Not much movement and I probably wouldn't have even noticed if I wasn't so hyped up and super aware of every damn thing going on around me. Not a snake and not a critter. I see a person doing exactly what I'm doing, aiming a pair of binoculars on me. We're staring right at each other. Uh-oh.
Right now, in this moment, I wish Long Pork was telling the story. He'd have something funny to say about what goes down. That guy had a way with words. Me? I ain't got fucking time.
Fucking time or not, I can't exactly hurry away from where I am without the farm's guards seeing me. So I slowly tuck my binoculars away and start scooting backwards across the dirt. I have to go slow so I don't poof up any dirt clouds. It is about to drive me crazy how slow I have to go.
I glance over at the other person and see they're doing the exact same thing. We're in a slow-motion, backwards race to get away from the farm. If I wanted the person dead, I could totally take them out from here, but that'd make noise and noise would bring guards and then shit gets fucked and blah blah blah.
Slow-motion race. Yay.
My heels dig into the slight rise in the dirt and I crawl up over it, my eyes locked onto the farm. Spy guy to my right is a worry, but not as much as the heavily armed Doyles. I spook him and maybe Audrey doesn't come out of the commander's tent.
Once I'm over the rise and have some cover, I roll onto my side and pull a .45. I take aim at Mr. Mystery, but he's gone. I don't see the dickhead anywhere. I am assuming it's a guy. Not quite sure. I couldn't tell from the angle and distance between us.
A cloud of dirt poofs up by my left foot and I jerk it back. No crack of a gunshot, so the guy must be using a suppressor. Pussy. My eyes scan the area, and at first I don't see him, then I see a tiny flash before another poof of dirt kicks up by my belly. Half an inch higher and he would have gutted me.
Fuck this shit.
I roll and roll and roll until I am sure he can't get a bead on me. Too much scrub brush and crap in the way. I yank the Barrett from my back which isn't easy when you can't fucking stand up.
Man, I got so much sand in my holes, it ain't funny.
With a .50 caliber rifle in my hands, I feel a fuck-ton safer. I open the scope and start hunting. Yes, yes, I know if I fire the Barrett then everyone from here to Mexico will hear me, but fuck it. Mystery Dickhead took some shots at me. If I play this right, I'll take him out and then be able to scramble back down the dirt trail and away from the farm before the Doyles can get their trucks started.
They'll find his body first and maybe get confused enough to not come searching for me. What? It could happen.
Finally, I get his position and I place my finger on the trigger. Slow breaths. Don't pull, just squeeze the trigger at the moment between breaths. Let the gun do the work. I start to feel the action on the trigger then stop. I see him, but something's wrong. He's moving too much. Shaking around.
Then a big gust of wind hits and he splits in half. His top half stays put, but his bottom half starts tumbling like one of them desert weeds. Those legs are gone on a little trip. I track them with my scope and see they ain't legs. They're just pants. Empty pants.
Shitfuck.
"Slow," a man whispers from my side. "Very slow."
I turn my head and slowly take my hand off the Barrett. There's a man in his boxers and a tank only a couple feet away. He's covered in dirt and has a .45 of his own aimed at me.
"You're quiet," I say. "Really quiet."
"I am," he says. "Now, how about you take those .45s off your belt and toss them to me. Then those blades. You can leave the Barrett right where it is. I doubt you could swing that around and get a bead on my before I put a bullet through your eye."
"You sure?" I ask as I take the .45s and toss them to him. "Want to bet?"
He eyes me and I eye him.
"Who the fuck are you?" he asks. "You with those other women the Doyles brought in?"
"I'm just a scared wanderer person that got lost," I say. "Who the fuck are you?"
"Jack," he says. "Jack Heavy."
"Heavy?" I ask. "Like the Heavies? They your people? You got a group of crazies around here fighting with the Doyles?"
"How have you heard of the Heavies?" he asks. "Who told you that name?"
"Some crazy bitch in town," I say. "She's dead now because she tried to steal my duffel bag."
He looks at the duffel bag.
"What's in there?" he asks.
"Dolls," I say. "I like dolls."
"Bullshit," he says and his hand tightens on the pistol. But his finger is to the side of the trigger, resting on the guard. He doesn't want to shoot me.
"You hate the Doyles?" I ask. "Because I hate the Doyles. Maybe we can make a deal."
"What kind of deal?" he asks.
"You and your people help me get my sisters back," I say. "We help you kill every last Doyle in this whole place. The Doyles at the farm and the Doyles in town."
"I like that idea," Jack Heavy says. "But there's one problem with that."
"What's the problem?" I ask. "Seems easy enough. You and yours help me and mine. All the Doyles die. No problem."
He sighs then starts to respond. He sighs again and starts to respond again, but just shakes his head back and forth.
"You have guns in that duffel?" he asks.
"Maybe," I say. "You willing to have your people help me?"
"No," he says.
"No?" I ask. "Why the fuck not? I'm not a friend of the Doyles. I hate the Doyles! You look like you hate the Doyles too. Why won't you have your people help me?"
"Because that's the problem," he says. "I don't have any people. I'm it. I'm the Heavies. All of them."
"Oh," I say. "Well, shitfuck."
Chapter Twelve
I'm a little disappointed. I can admit that. A little disappointed.
No Heavies. Just a heavy. A Jack Heavy. If that's his real name.
"Is that your real name?" I ask. "Jack Heavy? Kind of a funny name."
"What's yours?" he asks as he
slowly puts his .45 away and tosses mine back to me. Nice guy. A little too trusting, but nice.
I think for a second then say, "Elsbeth."
"Elizabeth?" he asks.
"No. Elsbeth," I say again.
"And I have the funny name," he says.
The guy is older than me by about ten years. He's fit and knows how to use a pistol. Easy to see by how he handles it. I don't even need to see him shoot to know he probably hits his target every time. Those missed shots earlier were on purpose. I know a shooter when I see a shooter.
"Why would that chick say there are lots of Heavies?" I ask him.
We're both scooting backwards, staying low as we move our butts farther away from the breeding farm. We aren't heading to the main road, but in a different direction. Jack says he has a Jeep we can use to get away. But it's a bit of a hike. Or crawl. More of a crawl until we can get over the small hill just a few yards away then we hike.
Not going to be fun once we're up on the hill, too much visibility from the farm. But if we can make it over without being seen then we can stand up and walk the rest of the way. I am looking forward to that.
"I'm good at what I do," Jack says. "The local crazies, and the Doyles, all think I'm a team of men when I'm obviously just the one."
"Just the one," I say. "This sucks ball shits."
"Does it?" he chuckles. "Ball shits. Nice."
"Why would they think you're a bunch of men when you're just you?" I ask.
"Because I always shout 'Come on Heavies! Kill them all!' when I hit them," he says. "And I'm fast, so I move around a lot and pretend to have different voices."
"Oh," I say. "Different voices are fun."
He gives me that look people give me when they first meet me. He thinks I'm one of the crazies.
"Yeah, different voices are fun," he says. That surprises me. "I can do a good falsetto, so the Doyles think there are some women in the Heavies. It drives them nuts because they believe all women are inferior to men and need to be captured and controlled."
"And bred," I say. "Fucking Doyles."
"Yeah," he chuckles. "Fucking Doyles."
We get to the base of the hill, which means we're pretty fucking exposed, but there's enough brush around to keep the Doyle guards from seeing us right away. Once we crawl up that hillside, though, I expect to feel the sting and hear the buzz of bullets. I like the buzz, it's a nice sound, but the sting ain't so nice. Nope. Not nice at all.
"Ready?" Jack asks and nods to the hillside. "We should go one at a time."
"Same time," I say. "We need to move our asses. Can't waste the day. If they see us, they'll pause to pick a target. Gives us a half-second lead."
"A half-second?" Jack chuckles. "You're that good that you think in half-seconds?"
"Yeah," I say. Not gonna lie to the guy.
"Your friends inside that good?" he asks.
"Yeah," I say and nod.
"Then why are they inside still?" he asks. "I'd think they'd have busted out by now."
"They're waiting for me," I say. "I come in from the outside and create some chaos so they can tear shit up inside."
"But you didn't expect the level of security the Doyles have, did you?" he says and chuckles again.
Usually, I'd smack an asshole that chuckles at me so much. But, like I said, he's a nice guy. Ain't no mean chuckle. He just thinks I'm in over my head. I may be, but fuck it, I don't care. I just care about getting my sisters out of there and freeing the preggers ladies.
"I didn't expect all the security," I say. "Why they got so much security?"
"Part of that is my fault," Jack says. "I've hit them a few times and they've upped their game. There's also the cannies over in the next valley. They make plays now and again, looking for some quick meat. They never get inside, but they've hit trucks as they come and go."
"Trucks come and go," I mumble. "Can we—?"
He cuts me off. "Easier to hit the farm than try to take a truck as it's going inside. They put everything they have at that front gate. And they search every truck from front to back, top to bottom. I tested it once by taping a bouncy ball up underneath. They found it. If they can find that then they'll find either one of us."
"I fucking hate Doyles," I growl.
He chuckles again and pats my shoulder. "Yep," he says. "I fucking hate Doyles too." He looks at the hillside and gives my shoulder a squeeze. "Ready?"
I like how he squeezes my shoulder.
"Ready," I say.
We go. No waiting or hesitation. No crawl a few feet then wait. He takes the duffel while I carry my gear pack and the Barrett. We're almost at the top when the first shot rings out. From that distance, the bullet would have already hit by the time we heard the shot, so they missed on the first try.
"You good?" he asks as we move faster.
"Good," I say.
Dirt kicks up by my face and I wince. The sound of the shot reaches us just as we reach the top and roll to the other side, safe and covered.
"You good?" I ask him.
"Good," he says. He gets up into a crouch, the duffel bag slung across his back. Guy is strong to move as fast as he does with that much gun weight on him. "Come on. We get down in this gully and follow it for a quarter mile. My Jeep is there."
"Is it gully or gulch?" I ask.
"What?" He frowns at me. "What are you talking about?"
"Is it a gully or a gulch? What's the difference?" I ask.
"What does it matter?" he replies.
"I don't know," I say and shrug as we hit kinda level ground. "This is like the Wild West, so I thought ditches like this are called gulches."
"I honestly don't know," he says. "I'm from San Diego. We have fish tacos and some nice waves out there. I don't know shit about gullies or gulches."
"Okey dokey, just wondering," I say as we follow the gully (gulch?) for a while.
We have our .45s out and take the path nice and easy, watching for Doyle scouts or whatever else might come for us. I ain't happy to hear there are some cannies close enough to make trouble. Yeah, it's great they're making trouble for the Doyles, but cannies don't discriminate who they fuck with. They'll fuck with anyone they think they can eat.
We hit a bend in the gully and Jack holds out a hand. I stop and wait, listening hard against the wind. It's blowing strong and ain't doing my ears no favors. Nor my eyes. Lots of dust and grit swirling around.
Jack whistles low and I hear something I ain't heard in a very long time.
"We're good," he says and straightens up.
We get around the bend and I just stare. Not at the Jeep, which is a sweet ride, but at what's sitting in the front seat. A dog.
"That's a dog," I say. "You got a dog."
"I do," Jack says.
More of that chuckling. I give him a smile. Between the chuckles and the dog, I feel like a girl. I don't quite remember being a girl, other than those stupid nightmares I get, but this feels about right. No worrying whether I'm going to get killed. No worrying about who I got to kill. Just a nice guy chuckling and a pretty dog.
"What's his name?" I ask.
"Muffin," he says.
"Muffin?" I laugh.
"Yeah," he says and his face turns to storm clouds.
"Sorry, I wasn't making fun," I say. "Just wasn't expecting that name."
"My daughter named him," Jack says. "My oldest daughter."
"You have more than one?" I ask.
"I did," he says then points at the Jeep. "Come on. Let's get the fuck out of here." He snaps his fingers. "Muffin! Backseat!"
The dog jumps into the back as we hurry to the Jeep. It's one of those Wranglers. Not tricked out like Critter's, but it has some modifications. Lots of heavy-gauge wire-screen bolted to the roll bars and frame to keep the Zs out. The tires are big and look pretty new and the suspension is lifted pretty high, so I have to climb in by grabbing a roll bar and hauling myself up. When I sit down, I notice there're a couple of weird hooks here and there that
I can't figure out.
"What are these for?" I ask.
"Rifles," he says as he starts up the Jeep. It's quiet. He's got a pretty damn good muffler on the thing and must have the engine insulated somehow. "I can rest the barrels there and it steadies my shots."
"You shoot from the passenger seat?" I ask, patting the hook by me.
"I wire in rifles and use lines to pull the triggers," he says as he backs us up a bit then swings the Jeep around and heads right up the side of the gully. He floors it and we're moving fast across the scrubland. "I have to keep up the image of lots of Heavies with lots of guns."
"Right," I say and smile.
I look back over my shoulder and Muffin is staring right at me. His eyes are bright blue and he's about fifty pounds. Not a huge dog, but no small yapper. He's a funky blue/grey color with black spots all over him. He looks like a stormy evening.
"Blue Heeler," Jack says. "That's his breed. I think. He's probably a mix with some pit and maybe Australian Shepherd. Not that I care."
Muffin gets tired of staring at me and looks out to the side, his mouth open and tongue hanging out. I start to turn away too, but he perks up and that tongues goes right back in his mouth as his ears stand up straight.
Jack sees all this in the rearview mirror.
"What is it, Muff?" he asks.
I look the way the dog is looking and see a Z stumbling along the desert, chasing after a much faster rabbit. The Z looks like one of the fast ones, but it ain't faster than a jackrabbit. Not much is.
"Oh," Jack says. "Yeah, we're getting more and more like those around here lately. The fuckers can climb too, if they want to."
"Yep," I say. "I've met a few."
"Where?" Jack asks. "Where are you from?"
"North," I say.
"There's a lot of places north," he replies. "Where exactly?"
"Colorado," I say.
He smiles and nods. "Okay. I'll let you tell me when you know you can trust me."
"That could be a while," I say.
"You're already in my Jeep with me so you must trust me some," he says.
"I trust that I can handle myself around you if you make a move. That's my life," I say. "But I don't trust you with the lives of my friends or my family."