by Maxey, Phil
Zach opened the left door and was immediately hit by a gust of wind. Where the buildings side window should have been was now a large hole, with splintered planks of wood on both sides. The furniture and carpet in the small office was brown because of damp, and what used to be a desk was now a heap of broken parts. He looked around but couldn’t see anything that indicated it might contain keys. He then tried the other office but it was locked. Standing back he kicked near the handle hard and the door flew open revealing a small room with metal cabinets on all four walls. Each one had a long slender draw with paper with numbers written on.
“These are probably the keys,” Zach said to the soldiers. “Get these open, then bring all the keys to Abbey out front. I’m going to look around some more.” Zach walked out the back entrance. “Abbey, how’s it looking? Over?”
“Two vehicles, what I think are converted buses, each could hold twenty people easily, and there’s at least another three smaller truck based RV’s, could maybe hold fifteen people each, but we might have to pull some of the furniture out of them. Over.”
Zach looked at the time on his radio, then at the sky above him. “Bass, how’s it looking out there? Over.” The Sergeant informed him that everything looked clear. Zach looked out over the lot, rows of trailers, some covered in leaves sat neatly in the early afternoon cloudy sky. In the distance a large sign announced. “Propane here! Only $39!”
“Propane would be useful,” said Jacob.
“Holy…you made me jump,” said Zach.
“I apologize, I guess sneaking up on people comes naturally to me,” Jacob said with a smile. “Would have been here sooner but it’s taking me this long to get over the fence,” Zach smiled. “Shall we check out that propane store over there?” Zach nodded.
The soldiers broke open the cabinets, put the keys in a bag and took them to Abbey, who then was able to start up each of the RV’s they had chosen.
“Got the RV’s started, but one is low on gas, we’re going to have to siphon some from something else around here. Over,” said Abbey sitting in the driver’s seat of one of the smaller brown and cream striped RV’s.
“Good, we have found a propane store, might be useful to take some cylinders along with us. We’ll fill up a few of the RV’s with them. Over.”
Cal and Fiona sat inside a light yellow coach, which sat towards the back of the convoy. “Even though these are probably the most confortable seats I’ve sat in for…well since we left New Mexico, I want to be back in a Humvee,” said Fiona.
“I hear that,” said Cal, a few seats further forward than Fiona. “Being in here, feels like we’re going on vacation. Feel’s wrong.”
Fiona got up and walked to where Cal was sitting and sat in the seat across from him. “How’s the head?”
Cal smiled. “Still on my shoulders,” Fiona looked down, her mind seemingly elsewhere. “It’s not on you, what happened back there.” Cal looked across the aisle at her. She returned the look, her mouth forming a smile which her eyes betrayed. Cal reached across and put his hand on her arm. “Not on you.” He then turned and looked forward when something caught his attention. Leaning further forward he squinted his eyes.
“What is it?” said Fiona.
“I think we need to probably go soon.” Cal then picked up his radio. “This is Cal, there’s something heading our way, in the sky, from the north. Over.”
“We see them. Over,” replied Bass who was standing outside the middle Humvee. “Captain, there’s a number of large flying creatures coming our way. I would say they are seven or eight klicks out.”
“We see them too, we’re almost done, we will start driving the RV’s over to you now. I want the Humvee’s guns all trained on them, but don’t fire unless they attack. Over.” Bass acknowledged the order. A smaller convoy of RV’s started leaving the dealerships lot.
Raj overheard the radio chatter on Rob’s radio and sprang forward. “No, no, they mustn’t move, tell them to stop their vehicles!” Rob looked a bit nonplussed by the request. Raj grabbed his radio. “This is Dr. Joshi, if they see moving objects it will draw their attention, just stop everything, stop your vehicles, and everyone get inside!”
Zach heard Raj and ordered everyone to stop where they were. Everyone who was outside quickly dived inside a vehicle. The flying creatures were now flying lower and were only a few hundred yards away from the front of the convoy.
“Stay away from the windows,” Raj half whispered into the radio. Rob got out of the drivers seat and they all ducked down in the central aisle. “Try not to move, or make a sound.”
Large dark shadows started blocking out the sun and moving across the convoy. As they did a kind of clicking noise could be heard coming from the sky above. Fascinating Raj thought. A larger than the rest shadow loomed ahead of the bus Raj was on and the creature landed with a thump on the roof. Raj and the rest looked upwards to the ceiling of the bus and indentations formed where the creature stood. Tyler’s eyes were wide, Raj could see his chest rising and falling as he was trying to control his breathing. Rob placed his large calloused hand on Tyler’s shoulder and he turned and smiled, taking a breath. The indentations then moved towards the back of the bus as the creatures claws scratched over the painted surface a few feet above their heads. There was then an increase in intensity in clicking sounds and the indentations disappeared with the shadow moving off to join the rest of the creatures in the distance. Everyone let out a breath. Raj quickly got up, rummaging through his backpack until he found his notebook, which he then furiously started writing in.
“Oh.” Raj passed the radio back to Rob.
“What were they?” Said Tyler to Raj still sitting in the aisle.
“Hmm oh, there are many flying creatures, these ones we think were evolved from fruit bats, and we’re calling them Man Bats.” Said Raj, busily scribbling his thoughts.
CHAPTER 14
The twenty-vehicle convoy passed quickly out of the town of San Jade, passing another reservoir without incident. The sun was now halfway to the horizon as the landscape became featureless again with only the occasional small hill to break up the view.
Michael sat back down in the Humvee. “Man, I should of stayed in better shape inside. Standing for hours in this thing isn’t as easy I thought it would be.”
Zach smiled to himself. “It’s ok to take a break, but not too long of one.”
“Yes, boss, just need a few minutes.”
Zach’s radio came to life with a voice he recognized.
“It’s only been a week, but it feels a lot longer! You out there, Zach? Over.”
“Brad!” Almost in unison, each person in the Humvee said his name.
“We’re on our way too you, but will probably be an hour or two late, we ran into some trouble not long after we left the camp, lost one of our men and two vehicles. Over.” A few seconds passed.
“I’m sorry to hear that. Haven’t seen much of those furry fucks, since our run in with them, but stay alert anyway. Over.”
“Will do, get the coffee ready. Over And Out.” Zach put the radio down and smiled as he drove.
Abbey looked out across the new town they were moving through. Smart looking homes stood off in the distance, in start contrast to the cars and trucks sitting abandoned. A large advertising board on the side of the road proudly announced a new kind of skin cream, making Abbey touch her face. Her attention then turned to a large light colored building off in the distance, which the highway seemed to be taking them towards. It was the largest building they had seen since leaving the camp and stood out amongst the smaller homes and shops around it. As they approached the junction in front of it, Zach’s radio came to life.
“Sir, there’s a sign on that building, eleven o’clock. Over,” said Bass.
Zach could see the sign just as everyone else could, and swore under his breath. “Everyone stop a hundred yards ahead. Over.”
Painted with red paint on the side of numerous white bed sheets was t
he message “Survivors here, please help!” The convoy came to an abrupt halt.
“Sergeant, get on the radio, see if anyone is responding on any frequencies. Everyone else stay alert, we’re too exposed out here. Over,” said Zach. Michael stood back up and swept the Humvee’s gun around. Pulling down the Humvee’s window, Zach leant his rifle on the seal and looked down the scope at the building. The sheets flapped in the winter gusts. He scanned across the windows for any sign of life, but there was none. Lower down in front of the building was a large sign with brass lettering. “Scottsfield Hospital.”
“Nothing on the radio. Sir. Over,” replied Bass. Zach sighed, sliding his hand over his growing hair.
“I know we’re way behind schedule, but we need to check this place out, there could be people in there,” said Abbey.
“Could be creatures too,” replied Jacob.
Zach looked around him. A wall ran around the front of the front of the building about two hundred yards from the front entrance. To his right a shopping mall sat off in the distance with a car park running a good distance alongside the road. “Fiona you up for a quick scouting mission. Over.”
“Reckon I am. Over.”
“Bass, I’m going to need two soldiers with me and Fiona. Cal, I’ll need you to keep an eye on the building if you see any movement, let us know inside. Everyone else park up in the lot on the right, be ready to leave quickly if needed. Over.”
Zach, Fiona and the two soldiers ran and crouched beneath the small wall.
“When we’re inside move quickly and quietly, don’t use the radio unless you have to,” said Zach to the two soldiers. “What’s your name’s?”
“Private Davis. Sir,” said the female soldier.
“Private Martinez. Sir.”
They all hopped over the wall and quickly ran over the fading grass to a small parking lot in front of the hospital. The five-story building leaned over them and like a lost kite the blankets flapped above their heads. The entrance consisted of large glass panels, stretching meters to their left and right, with a large sliding open door in the middle. A rusting gurney sat up against a curb with bloody sheets on top of it. Slowly they entered a large lobby area with a static escalator to the right, and a counter built into the wall on the left. Ahead were rows of chairs many upturned, with the occasional potted plant sitting on a table in-between. More gurneys lined up against a far wall, alongside some closed double doors.
“You two look upstairs, we’ll search this floor,” said Zach.
The two soldiers slowly ascended the metallic stairs, while Zach and Fiona moved through the lobby towards the double doors. Fiona looked through the small windows into a gloomy corridor beyond. Cables hung down from the ceiling and a wheelchair lay on its side in the middle of the corridor. Blood smeared the wall and the once glossy floor. Zach slowly pushed the left door open a few inches and listened into the gap. Only silence could be heard in the hallway ahead. They both moved into the corridor and looked into the first room. Its door was open and contained a bed with a rotting corpse. At the bottom of the bed was a suitcase and a pair of shoes neatly arranged. They moved along the corridor checking each room until they arrived at more closed double doors marked “Cafeteria” and some stairs leading upwards.
“Martinez, Davis, any sign of life up there? Over,” said Zach. Only static emanated from his radio. “Martinez, Davis, come in. Over.” More static.
“Maybe we’re in a dead zone,” said Fiona.
“Let’s head upstairs.”
They both ascended to the first floor. Another corridor stretched out ahead of them, this one gloomier than the ground floor due to most of the doors being closed.
“Martinez, Davis, come in. Over!” This time Zach raised his voice, sending it echoing around the hallway. “Sergeant Bass, you out there. Over.” More static. “Dead zone. Great. We need to split up, go back out to the front, tell them there’s no signal in here, then meet me back in the lobby in ten minutes.” Fiona ran back down the stairs.
Zach looked down the hallway, and up the stairwell. The blankets were hanging from the forth floor windows, so slowly he climbed the stairs, straining his ears for the slightest sound. Arriving on the forth floor, furniture, trays, bottles, bedding lay strewn everywhere. The rustling of wind swept through the hallway, and a door twenty or so feet away banged against its frame. Zach raised his gun and walked forward.
“Captain Felton, you there. Over.” The voice of private Martinez bounced off the walls. Zach reached for the radio and instinctively turned the volume down and continued walking towards the banging door. The sound of wind was stronger now. Zach pushed the door open slowly. Inside was a large room, probably some kind of communal eating room for doctors and nurses. Over the floor pools of dark red goo lay scattered around paint cans and brushes. In one corner a sofa sat with a corpse laying on it. A blonde haired woman. Zach walked over and knelt down next to her. She looked like she would have been in her forties but it was hard to tell. She was wearing a white doctors jacket, and clasped in her hand was a small locket with a young girls face in it. The door behind him opened and Martinez and Davis entered the room.
“We have checked the other floors, there’s a few corpses but no sign of life anywhere,” Said Martinez. “Dr. Tanner has been trying to reach you on the radio. Sir.”
Zach stood and turned up the volume on his radio. “What can I do for you doctor?”
“If you can get to the dispensary, there are a few things that would come in useful.”
“Sure. What are they?”
After ten or so minutes, they were leaving the lobby with arms full of the medicines the doctor had requested, or as close to them as they could find. Before they left the forth floor Zach got the soldiers to pull the blankets in from the windows. When he climbed back into the Humvee, the sun was now a few degrees above the horizon. He clicked on his radio as he pulled out of the parking lot. “No more stops until Roswell. Over.”
CHAPTER 15
Cal woke with a fright, his hands lashing out at the seat in front of him. His head burned and throbbed, touching it just made it worst. He looked out through the coach’s window to his right at miles and miles of desert. The coach had stopped.
“Are we in Roswell? Why have we stopped?” No answer came. He leaned to his left and looked along the aisle but there was no one. Something’s wrong. Standing up uneasily he reached for the headrest to steady himself. “Hello?” Where the fuck is everyone. He bent down and looked out the left side windows at an endless sea of desert. It was then that he released that his coach was alone, there were no vehicles behind him, and none in front. He started to feel hot. Being inside the coach wasn’t helping, wasn’t cooling him down, so he walked to the front and got off, almost falling down the last step. His head was hurting him, a constant drumming between his ears that made it hard to focus. He stood and looked skywards towards an intense blue that seemed to invade his mind. Looking back down, a figure was standing in front of him. At first he thought it was one of his friends, but he couldn’t quite see clearly who it was. A bright light twinkled behind them blurring their shape. His eyes started to water trying to keep focus on them.
“Fiona? Why we here? I don’t feel too well.”
“Tell the Arclight we accepted.”
“Arclight, what?” The pain in his head was excruciating, he fell to his knees clutching his burning skull. “I don’t understand.”
“We are almost there.”
“Almost…what?”
“Cal, we’re almost there, wake up. ”Fiona shook Cal by the shoulder. Cal woke with a fright, making Fiona pull back her hand quickly.
“Hey you ok? Do you need the doctor?” Cal looked at her bleary eyed, then frowned and held his head. “Those pain killers the doctor gave you not working?”
“Are we still moving?” said Cal his voice gravely.
“Yeah, we’re about twenty minutes out, you were mumbling something in your sleep.”
Cal sat up in his seat and breathed heavily, puffing out his flushed cheeks. “Those pills she gave me really did a number on me.” Fiona smiled and put her hand on his shoulder.
By time they reached the outskirts of Roswell, the sun was well below the horizon, and only blue hues from the day before were left in the sky.
“I sure do hope that’s you I’m picking up on my furthest mike. Over,” said Brad.
Zach was lost in thought when Brad’s voice came through on the radio. Abbey replied instead. “Hey Brad, we’re maybe twenty minutes out, should be with you soon, got a few more vehicles with us than what we left with. Over.”
“So I’ve heard. Ok Coffee’s hot, see you soon. Over.”
Abbey looked over at Zach, his face looked drawn in the glow of the lights from the radios and dashboard. “You ok?”
“Yeah, I’m fine, looking forward to that coffee.” He then picked up his radio. “When we arrive in Brad’s street, try parking in two rows, so we can keep the vehicles closer to the house. Over. Oh and if you see anything resembling a werewolf let me know. Over.” Bass and the other drivers acknowledged.
Within minutes they were passing over railway lines and moving across Main Street towards Brads. The office building they stayed in a week before stood out as a dark monolith against the night sky.
“Feel’s strange being back here,” said Abbey. Zach smiled and put his hand on hers. “Like it was a lifetime ago.”