by P. S. Power
Fudge...
“I don't even like fudge.” He muttered out loud. Carl looked at him like he was insane and shook his head.
“You don't like fudge? That ain't natural man. I'm starting to worry about you Jake. What kind of person doesn't like any kind of chocolate?”
That got a shrug in return. It was a real point, but didn't help to talk about.
The point was, there was nothing in town. No people were out and no dead walked the streets searching for food. Right up until they got about a half mile from the police compound, the old Compton place. Then they found about two hundred zombies. Well, it made sense. They were all here, trying to get in to the food.
Jake looked around, but noticed there was no cover at all. He wanted his rocket launcher then. It was kind of a tempting target, the tight knot of hungry dead just pushing against, and walking past the metal fence, groaning just like the always did.
He didn't see any regular people inside at least. They looked to be hiding, which was sensible enough.
Thank goodness they had plenty of ammo with them.
Jake just sighed.
“Spread out, Molly... Darla, we need screamers. Brief noise to start, Molly first, we want to spread them out if we can. Keep an eye out all around though, in case more show up from the sides or back. Everyone ready?” He grinned and made a face, as if to say, if you are ready, you've lost it. Vickie walked over and gave him a hug with one arm.
“I'm good.”
Molly nodded and then everyone else did the same except Robin, who looked damned determined. Jake patted her on the back gently, making sure she knew he was there first.
“Calm, and make each round count. Try not to let them get to us. If they do, Vickie, Tipper and I will handle them, unless there are just too many, which we'll signal by running away suddenly.”
The girl just nodded, as if he hadn't been kidding.
He waved at Molly, who did her job, a single brief scream. At first nothing happened, so she did it again. Then two more times. Finally a few pulled off, walking slowly towards them. Jake could have managed most of them himself he thought, as long as they came at their current speed. After half an hour they had about twenty of them down and switched to Darla screaming, which let things pick up a bit. It wasn't hard. Vickie cleaned up the few that tried to come from behind, letting the rest of them focus on the job before them.
They needed to speed up though, because, if they could, Jake wanted to get the first load of people and supplies in that night. He got Molly to scream too and had both girls go longer. That got things moving. It was a grind, and a little nerve wracking, but they finally had the last ones walking towards them by about dark. Then they had to scale the fence, to get in. No one from within the beige and tan barn buildings or golden yellow house came out at all.
“They'll be hiding in the bunker.” Robin said with authority. “It's what we were trained to do when the zombies came. Hide and wait, while the men fixed everything. Or screwed it up worse. Whichever.”
It wasn't a bad plan, Jake thought. If you couldn't fight, hide, and let those who could do it without worrying about you. What it meant though was half an hour of breaking in to the building before they got to the right door inside. It was a thick metal thing done in gray, that could easily keep them out. Robin just walked over and started pounding. It wasn't some complex thing, one knock, followed by three, five and seven in clear groups.
The idea being that even a smart z might have problems with prime numbers in sequence.
“The radio suggested it.” The dark haired girl said, repeating it all twice more. Finally the door opened, slowly, with a short person with blond hair popping their head out. She had cornflower blue eyes, like Rachel had. Colleen Becks.
“Um, hello?” She said, which seemed really funny for a few moments for some reason, not able to help it, Jake moved to the door.
“Hi, we were wondering if, in these troubled times, you'd heard the word of our lord, Jesus Christ?”
From behind the small woman a familiar voice came, also a woman. Which really just made sense given everything.
“Who's there?”
Colleen popped her head back in and pushed the door all the way open, so everyone could see.
“I don't know... I think they're Jehovah's Witnesses...”
That got a real laugh for some reason. From the other side of the door too. That one was more nervous though. Becky Fines walked forward and looked around. She stopped when she saw Robin and walked over to the girl.
“Are you OK? Darla?” She asked, so softly that it sounded almost like she was trying to keep the rest of them from hearing it.
“We're good. These are... Really good people Becky. The rules are strict, about noise though, not who you can sleep with, or have to obey. You can even walk up to Nathaniel and tell him to stick his head up his butt and he'll just ask you what's wrong. I tried it just to see. He hugged me. Can you imagine dad putting up with that? Plus... everyone is really special there. I mean, really. I'll try to explain that later, but they're good. They couldn't have kept up appearances like that the whole time.” Shifting to the side Robin pointed to Darla but didn't say anything else.
“We can trust them.” The tiny girl said, her voice young but suddenly ancient too. Jake glanced at her and the girl smiled, no missing teeth he noticed, which a kid that age should have. It seemed that not all the special people were there already, at the House. Interesting. Well, not too shocking either. The world was too hard for most regular people anymore. Everyone alive had something going for them. Some kind of an edge. Even him, possibly, whatever that was. Even if it was only just luck.
She continued, turning to him directly, “Can we speak about this privately? Later I mean?”
Jake shrugged.
“I think so, as long as you aren't a threat. So far so good?”
“I'm... not a threat to you or yours Jake. I give my word on that, by breath and blood.”
He nodded, the reference shot by him totally, but heck, it sounded nicely formal, didn't it? Carley stepped in for him then, with Tipper right behind.
It was the Val who spoke first.
“By breath and blood received and bound.”
“Heh. Of course.” The tiny girl bowed.
If she was a girl at all. Whatever. As long as she didn't want anyone hurt. Well, not their people. Of course, he counted these as his people too and said so out loud, just to make it clear. She counted too, as long as... He couldn't explain what that meant but it got nods all the way around.
Carley looked at the little form and smiled. “Just to be clear, Jake is A Very Good Man. Think on that before you answer.”
Darla took a full step back and stared at him for a long time.
Then bowed.
Oddly three other people did too. One of them was Sue. Another was one of the older teen girls, this one with bright red hair that looked fake, but probably wasn't if the color still held. The last was a boy, who couldn't have been nine, who stood and walked to the front, looking at everyone from the House with care, a blank look on his face.
“Shifter.” He said... delicately. As if waiting for the other shoe to drop. An attack maybe?
Vickie moved to meet him so Jake followed. Even he could guess what a shifter was. It wasn't exactly rocket-surgery was it?
The blond spoke quickly, in a tongue that Jake had never heard before. It sounded like German. Only harsher in tone.
The boy spread his hands, his dirty brown and white shirt looking odd for a second, and then, the dusty skin shining briefly, not glowing, just reflecting light, he stretched upwards. Until a much taller, older man stood in his place. He looked around the room and sighed. Before he could speak, the woman he'd been standing near, who looked about thirty-odd, or slightly older, moved forward, sounding scared.
“Daryl? What...”
The man turned and shook his head.
“No Lyn, the child you thought you met the day after t
he announcement and took as your own was me all along. I'm... a different kind of person. I can assume the shape of nearly anyone at need. I quickly figured that this would be my best chance for survival and chose a small and un-intimidating male form to prevent challenge or rape. It is the way my kind survive. Hiding with the strong. Thank you for your kindness. It shall be repaid, if it is ever within my power to do so.”
The woman cried, but the man turned from her, his cheeks firm and smooth, no look of age to them, but a feeling of being much older lay behind his eyes. The hair on his head was a gray-blond and his skin nearly true white, not an albino, but close, the eyes were gray as well, and bland. Mild. As if still not seeking challenge. The clothing was similar, but suddenly clean and bigger. So that was part of the package too?
Cool. No need to get him a lot of new outfits then.
Jake shrugged.
“Right now we need to load up and get people to the House. Snow is coming and I don't want to get caught and have to wait.” He looked at Becky Fines and then Colleen, hoping they'd help him get everyone moving. They just stood. Not budging at all. As if frozen for some reason.
Yeah, a man shape-shifting would have had that effect once on him too.
When he was twelve. Jake rolled his eyes.
“Don't get silly. Other than... Lyn here, no one should be too surprised, it's... just a thing. Some people are different than others. For instance, I'm hugely good looking.” Jake glanced around the room, which was a little dark at the back but painted a nice blue color. “You know, inside, where it counts. I have a lovely spleen. Are the vehicles ready at all? Who was in charge of that?”
People chuckled a little, but also got Tandy to come forward, a woman so bland he just decided not to remember her after that. There was literally nothing to distinguish her from anyone else in the place.
Except that she had the vehicles already loaded, with the food and important supplies ready first, along with room for everyone to ride in the first trip. So even if she was the definition of bland, Jake sort of fell in love with her a little, right there.
It took hours to get everyone on the vehicles though. They were already packed, but two of the little kids hid, afraid of going out at all, and then a whole bunch needed to use the bathroom before they left, even if it was only a fifteen mile trip across town. That meant it was dark when they left, driving slowly, in a long caravan. Jake watched the shadows closely ready to fight if he had to, in the shotgun position of the lead vehicle.
Nothing happened at all. They didn't even have a breakdown. Forty minutes later the whole of the old police compound, all ninety-three of them, settled into the House. Maybe not in perfect comfort, but with food, warmth and hopefully enough protection to keep them all safe.
Plus a field full of zombies to play with in the morning. What kid could ask for more?
As it turned out, adding a hundred people, nearly at least, to the House made a huge difference to how loud and crowded it was. Each person was quiet enough, even the kids, though Darla had to go around and hit a few people to make them get that way. Jake let her. If they didn't learn, he'd have to kill them, but it would crush his soul to have to shoot a living little kid in the head. Plus, that just wouldn't play well at all.
On top of the public reception he'd get, there was also having to chop off the little head. That was always gross. It was just worse when it was a child. Of course, with a kid, they could just grab them and stuff a rag in their mouth. That didn't work with an adult. Not if they were losing it big time. It was something to think about though.
Everyone just kind of stood for a while, but that wouldn't work. They needed to get things from the compound, which meant more trips back in the dark. It wasn't a fun thing to consider. Nerve wracking just to think about, but at least one more trip was needed. Jake mentioned it to the room, looking for volunteers.
“I'll go.”
Jake had to search around in the candle light to find who said it. After a bit he recognized the voice and found who it belonged to. Colleen. That got a half dozen other people to step forward, but they needed more, if they didn't want to take all night. The orphan boys and the shape shifter, who'd held to his more drab, but manly, looks, volunteered as well, and so did Sammi and Ken. Dave already had, so that would help.
Their kids could shoot at least.
It took hours, but they got in to the driveway of the House just as the snow started falling. Heavy white flakes, like lace in the headlights of the vehicles, making the ground a softer color already. It was pretty, for all that it meant a giant pain in the rump trying to get anywhere for a while. It was late already, it had been dark for hours, but that didn't mean that it was time for sleep yet. Unfortunately. There was a lot to do still.
First they unloaded the large police vans they'd taken, having picked the place clean of sleeping mats and mattresses, so that people wouldn't be on the floor. Or they wouldn't be the next day. These had to go into the underground rooms, which was a bigger task in the dark than it sounded like. Then it would always be dark down there, so no big. Even Sammi needed some light to see, so they had to arrange the space by feel. Basically the rooms, all three of them, just got lined with padding on the floor. Not perfect, but it was flatter and warmer that way.
They all had chimneys, but only one had a stove yet. It was the one spare they'd managed to find. Until they got more, people would have to share rooms inside the House. It would suck, which was why Jake was getting out of there in the morning.
If he could.
It was nearly light when they finally got everything arranged and the snow was about two inches deep already. Julio had said it would be about four inches, but that was a guess, super-powers or not. After all, what did four inches feel like to his internal abilities? Jake couldn't even imagine it.
When they walked into the House, through the kitchen, Lois was already hard at work, trying to get everything started by herself. Since her job had suddenly gotten twice as hard, more than that, cooking for so many new people, Jake stopped and looked at her in the very dim light that came through the window.
“OK, Lois, what do you need me to do?” The words were a little louder than he intended, but not too bad. Enough so that everyone else that had been working just stopped and stared at him. Robin gave a very soft groan, but didn't complain otherwise.
“Oh... I need more wood and two large pots of water, then if you could tend the fire while they heat, that would be wonderful. We didn't set up any extra helpers for the kitchen.” She actually sounded relieved, which Jake wondered at. She could just tell people they were on kitchen duty after all. No one would speak against her on it. If they did, they could just not eat, since Lois controlled all the food. It would be stupid though. Really, there was almost nothing else to do but work.
Instead Jake nodded and gave her a grin, then, trying not to be a standoffish jerk, he moved in and gave her a quick hug. She stiffened at first, but patted him on the back, rubbing it a little with her right hand before stepping back.
“Um...” She said.
“That's just my way of letting you know that everyone will be helping you out. We'll set up a rotation and have people here for lunch and we'll all stay and help for this meal, so you won't be caught out. Well, part of us will. We have too many people in here really. So, how many do you need?”
The number was smaller than he thought, only five people. He'd have picked twice that, but Lois was the one that knew what to actually do.
Sammi sighed, “A long night already, but I can hold out for a while longer.”
That got Robin as well, who had some experience, gotten in the last weeks, and Colleen. They needed one more then. Jake cast around, wondering if Ken would step up but it was Dave that did it. That got a blink from everyone except Sammi.
“There we go then. The rest of you get out of here then. You can do dishes after dinner.” Jake said, trying to be playful.
Everyone else just mumbled as they walked ou
t. Too tired to argue it seemed.
Good. Jake hated confrontation anyway, and really had been kidding.
They'd have a real crew picked for that by then. Maybe some of the kids and new women? They had to keep busy after all. They should also have some kind of school. He kind of wondered if they had already, but didn't think so. But what else did they have to do? Firewood would only take so much time each day and a lot of it was already set up.
Guard duty? Short shifts maybe. Hunting...
Smiling Jake wondered if anyone would want to help him with forge work. He still needed a saw after all and they'd need a lot more, as time went on, not less. Burt and Justine could get some helpers too. It wasn't enough, but it would be a start. People to do the wash?
He spent some time brainstorming silently while working, just doing what Lois said. It wasn't hard, though some attention was needed to the stove. They needed another one of those too. Maybe in an outdoor building? He'd get with Burt and Lois on the idea. Nate too of course. Jake wasn't in charge after all, but if they kept waiting for problems to come up, they were eventually going to be caught out and something would trip them up too bad to survive.
Jake remembered something and sighed hugely.
Freaking heck.
“We need to get the new septic system in as soon as possible.” He muttered to the room, which got Sammi to freeze in place, a shocked look on her face.
“Ah... yes we do.” Her tone was strange, and scared. She normally didn't get frightened, not unless things were really bad. That got Dave to pay attention too.
“Can't what we have last for a bit?”
Jake didn't know. Not really. What he did understand was that if they lost the system now people could get sick and die. Not everyone but enough to make things really bad. Sammi shook her head.
“No. The current system is for a family of eight. We've already been stressing it for far too long. We could lose it... Today even. We need to get on this quickly Jake.” Her tone was enough to get him going at least, tired or not.
“Right, we do that first then. After breakfast though. You two can help me convince everyone.”