The Feral Children [A Zombie Road Tale] Box Set | Books 1-3
Page 84
He’d been out for three days and at first, they weren’t sure he’d make it. They stripped him, washed the blood from his body but were mystified when there were no cuts, no bleeding gashes. He seemed to be sweating it out of his pores. Murray wrapped his arm to help the collarbone heal and had to convince Tobias and Kodiak he wasn’t suffering from Ebola. They’d given him water and broth. She and Harper had held up his head and poured it into his mouth. Much of it dribbled down his chest, but they’d gotten enough in him. He wasn’t dead yet and they’d done what they could. The rest was up to him.
She stopped hunting, hurried through her chores and kept her vigil. She wanted to be there when he woke up. She had questions for the stranger and she would get answers, one way or another. She had to know if he was one of Gordon’s gang or if they had done this to him. She had to know if he held the answers she was seeking, if he had encountered them and did he know where they were. She wore her armor and kept her weapons with her, she was guarding a prisoner. A dangerous one from the looks of him. Her anger had faded as she listened to him, to his dreams, to his occasional moans and the words he sometimes spoke. He sounded desperate and lost most of the time.
It irked her at first that Zero had accepted him so easily while she kept both tomahawks handy if he woke and tried something. It irked her that the wolf was laying on the rug beside the bed, keeping vigil of his own. It wasn’t like him to be so trusting. She trusted Zero, trusted him with her life, and his acceptance of the stranger eased some of her suspicions. If the wolf had picked up any sense of danger from him, surely, he would show it.
His sleep was deep, almost like he was in a coma at first but it became lighter. By the third day they expected him to wake up at any time. His dreams became more vivid and the words he uttered started to make sense. He seemed to be reliving the same nightmare, one where he was trying to help someone called Scarlet but he never succeeded. The dream would end, his fists would unclench and he’d sleep peacefully for a time before the cycle started again. Swan sharpened her blades or groomed her wolves as she kept watch, listened and wondered who he’d been.
Swan startled awake; she’d been dozing in the rocking chair. The stranger was upright on the bed, his eyes wide and darting. They found her in the moonlight and the first thing that popped in her mind was God, what beautiful eyes you have. He stared at her intently for a second then his eyes rolled up and he collapsed back onto the twisted sheets. Zero lowered his head and went back to sleep.
Her heart pounded, she gripped her weapons tighter and watched to see if he would regain consciousness. When he didn’t stir, she relaxed and told herself she needed to stay awake but soon drifted off. Zero was there, he would keep her safe.
“He woke up for a few seconds then passed out again.” She told the tribe in the morning.
“Let’s put him on the couch.” Kodiak said “I think he’s over whatever was wrong with him. If he’s dangerous, I’d rather more of us be ready. Besides, I’m sure you could use a break.”
Donny and Tobias moved towards the bedroom and returned a few seconds later with the unconscious boy draped in a sheet. Vanessa shooed the wolf cubs off the couch and Harper covered it with a clean blanket as Analise brought in a damp washcloth to lay over his forehead.
Swan didn’t care for how the other girls were staring at him. Didn’t care for the extra attention they lavished on him. She forced them aside as she tucked the sheet in around his body.
“What?” she said defensively. “He still has a fever. I don’t want him dying before I find out what he knows. Besides, Clara doesn’t need to see him naked.”
She met their eyes one at a time, dared them to challenge her.
Tobias snorted and burst out laughing. “Swan’s hot for the stranger!”
The taunt caught like wildfire and soon the whole tribe was giggling and making kissy faces. Swan blushed, told them they were idiots and stormed outside. She slammed the door behind her and looked for something, anything to throw her tomahawks at, and anything to distract her thoughts from the stranger. She didn’t want to admit it, but maybe she was a little jealous of the way they were fawning over him.
Maybe.
Just a little.
10
Call Me Bob
Kodiak watched from his perch in the windowsill as the stranger opened his eyes to find the muzzle of a bear breathing heavily in his face. He watched as the older boy eased his hand down under the blankets for the pair of guns that were now safely hidden away. The scarred stranger looked a little surprised when he found nothing but skin beneath the covers and he slowly bunched himself up to spring off the couch. Kodiak reflexively gripped the haft of his Warhammer as he watched.
“I wouldn’t do that if I were you.” He said. “Relax, he won’t hurt you.”
“Unless I tell him to.” He added after a pause, a little menace in his voice.
The boys studied each other from across the room. Both were lean and hard; both bore scars from their deadly encounters. Kodiak didn’t blink. The stranger didn’t blink either. He saw no hostility in the stranger’s eyes. Sadness and determination, but no malice or ill intent. Kodiak broke the gaze and looked to Otis.
“Otis, back off.” The boy commanded.
The big bear chuffed once more in the strangers face then ambled off to flop down in front of the fireplace. The triplets and their foxes immediately hid behind him and peered over the top of his shaggy brown pelt, safe from whatever was going to happen next. This was the first time they’d had a guest in the old house.
The stranger sat up slowly. No sudden moves that could be misconstrued as aggression. Still, he gave the impression of a coiled spring, ready to burst loose at any second. He probed his shoulder tenderly.
“Good work, whoever did this.” He said. “Thanks.”
Murray gave a slight bow from his wheelchair. “At your service, stranger. Got a name?”
The stranger ignored the question as they stared at his mottled body and watched him run fingers over the broken bone. He was one massive bruise from head to toe.
“What happened to my pants?” he asked and snatched the blanket back in place before it fell to the floor.
Swan blushed and the others started snickering.
Clara piped in. “Swan took them off!”
Clara ducked down behind Mr. Ringtail so they couldn’t see her but she couldn’t hide her giggles.
“They were filthy and you were stinking up the place,” Swan said in her defense. “Somebody had to do it, they were all bloody and you were drawing flies.”
Murray rolled up to face the stranger. “Yeah, that’s weird. You were soaked in blood, but you didn’t have any cuts. How did you get so bruised up, anyway? You get into a fight with a weed whacker?”
Harper handed him his pants and kept her eyes averted, she was nearly as red as Swan.
The stranger tried to smile, “Got beat with the ugly stick.” He said as he struggled into his leathers and tried to keep himself covered as all the girls raptly watched his muscles flexing.
The stranger kept glancing at Analise and Tobias out of the corner of his eyes. Kodiak thought he saw a twinge of sadness.
Caleb snickered. “Need help? Swan got them off you real quick, maybe she can help you put them back on.”
“SHUT UP CALEB!” Swan growled and flung a pillow at him. Caleb ducked behind Otis, who acknowledged it bouncing off of him with a half open eye before getting back to his nap.
Kodiak hopped down from his place in the windowsill. He held his hammer loosely and stopped in front of the stranger.
“It’s time you answered some questions.” Kodiak said.
The stranger, still struggling with his pants acted as if he didn’t hear him. The chatter from the others fell silent as they all waited to hear what he had to say.
The stranger looked up at Kodiak. “Sorry. What?” He tossed the sheet aside and began looking for his boots.
“I said it’s your turn to ans
wer questions.” Kodiak tried to hide his annoyance.
The stranger met his gaze. “Okay. No problem. But I really gotta pee. Can you point me in the right direction?”
Donny stepped from the shadows and gestured for the stranger to follow him. They returned from the outhouse a few minutes later to find the tribe bustling around and laying out breakfast.
The large oak table was loaded down with food. Fresh vegetables, roasted ears of corn, fried game and fish, scrambled eggs and Tobias’s slowly evolving efforts at homemade cheese. The stranger stared at the spread and the growling of his stomach elicited giggles from the triplets.
“I had a locket.” He said. “Did I still have it when you found me?”
Harper spoke. “Oh, I have it.” She stepped over to a rocking chair and picked it up, along with the stranger’s shirt. “I stitched up some of the tears.” She blushed again as he met her eyes.
“Thanks.” he said and started unwrapping the bandages that held his arm tight to his chest.
Murray watched him. “You should leave that. You’re not supposed to move it for a few weeks.”
The stranger pulled the last of the bandages away. “I heal fast.” He said as he probed his collarbone.
“Let me see. Bend down here.” Murray said.
The older boy obliged and Murray gently felt the damaged shoulder. This is odd, he thought. I know it was broken, I set the bones back in place. He probed some more. It was still bruised around the break, but it was definitely not broken. Not anymore. There were a lot of things about this stranger that had Murray’s Spidey senses tingling.
“I could have sworn it was broken. It felt broken, but bones don’t grow back together in three days.” Murray said.
The stranger stopped struggling with his shirt. “Three days? I’ve been out for three days?”
“Three days and three nights, sleepyhead!” Landon said.
“Three days and nights.” Echoed Clara. She wanted to add something to that, but Swan shot her a dirty look and the little wild girl held her tongue.
Swan watched as he resumed the struggle with his shirt, wincing as he tried to put his arm through the sleeve.
“Oh, give me that.” She said and watched the muscles ripple as she eased his damaged arm through the shirt, her fingers brushing over his skin. It suddenly felt a lot warmer in the house.
“It’s just a sprain.” She chastised. “You’re worse than Kodiak. Big baby.”
Clara pointed at the empty seat next to her. “You can sit by me,” and stuck her tongue out at Caleb and Landon.
“Unless you want to sit by Swan.” Caleb snorted. Swan kicked him under the table and stared at him until he looked down at his empty plate. Swan was scary.
Kodiak gestured to an empty seat between him and Donny. All the girls were acting stupid over his presence, even Swan. Especially Swan. If this guy tried anything, he wanted to be closest to react. Donny would have his back and Tobias would cut the stranger off if he tried something and bolted for the door. So far, he’d been nothing but polite, but so had Gordon when he was trying to get them to lower their guard. Kodiak would never make the mistake of underestimating an outsider again.
“Join us. You can sit here.” Kodiak said.
The stranger took his place between Kodiak and Donny. He picked at his plate, although it was obvious from the growls of his stomach he was starving.
Tobias looked on in annoyance. He and Analise worked hard on their meals and he was sensitive to any criticisms. This was the first outsider they’d invited to eat and he was eager to see how his food went over with someone who didn’t know that any smart comments would get them a bloodied nose.
“You don’t like it?” Tobias asked. He teetered between embarrassment and anger for a few seconds.
“No, it’s, good.” The stranger said. “But I don’t want to eat someone else’s share.”
Kodiak waved his fork. “Food we have plenty of. Don’t be shy. Those two will get insulted if you don’t eat enough, they might just stab you.”
From the other end of the table Vanessa said. “Or make you eat Tobias’ cheese.”
The table erupted in snickers and giggles.
“I heard that.” Tobias said. He stared everyone into silence. “And that was only one time.”
Breakfast was a loud and raucous affair. They dug in hungrily and their table manners weren’t what they were before the outbreak. The wolf cubs and foxes milled around under the table, greedily accepting morsels snuck to them by the triplets.
When Kodiak was done, he pushed his plate back and patted his full belly. When the stranger pushed his back as well, the table grew silent and all eyes went to him.
“We have questions and we need answers,” Kodiak said, his voice held an edge. “Because so far, you haven’t answered a single one that’s been asked. You haven’t told us your name, where you’re from, who you’re with, how you got so beat up and why you’re here.”
The stranger looked at the hard stares of the tribe. They were all waiting. The shadow of Gordon always lingered in each of their minds. They liked this stranger and the animals showed no animosity towards him like they had Gordon. Still, outsiders couldn’t be trusted. He was the first seemingly friendly face they’d met since the world ended. Each of them wanted him to be ok, to be a friend. Someone who could tell them what it was like in other places. Someone to offer reassurance that there were still other people out there and they weren’t all evil.
“My name is Bob, I’m from Canada, I’m by myself and I’m on a scouting mission to find a warmer place for our village. I’m on my way to Mississippi or maybe Louisiana. My car broke down and I got lost in the woods. I climbed a tree to see how to get out and fell. I must have hit every branch on the way down. Next thing I remember, I woke up here.”
Murray pondered the story. It pretty much matched Donny’s version, but Murray didn’t completely buy it. No way this guy snuck by Yewan’s nose and Donny’s keen eyes. The Asian boy was too savvy to be surprised the way he was.
“How many people are in your town?” Murray asked.
“Um, about thirty.” Bob answered. “But we don’t want any trouble from anyone. I’m just scouting a route. It’s mostly old people.”
Kodiak was suspicious. He was thinking the same thing Murray was thinking. “Did Gordon send you? Are you a spy?”
“No.” Bob answered. “I don’t know any Gordon and I’m not a spy. A spy for what?”
“A spy for Gordon.” Murray said.
Bob shook his head. “Never heard of her.”
Laughter erupted around the table and the tribe relaxed. Kodiak still had questions. Bob answered them, even when they weren’t what the kids wanted to hear. He told them about his fortified town way up in Canada and how he hoped to lead the village to a safe place in a warm environment. He warned them about the big cities and the millions of undead that wandered through them.
They fell silent after hearing about the devastation that had wrecked the country but their minds swam with the knowledge that there were other survivors.
“I need to leave.” Bob finally said. “I have a long way to go.”
Since eating, his color was better, and he wasn’t moving so sluggishly now. He still gave off a vibe of danger. Kodiak noticed it. Swan liked it. She mentally chastised herself. He was just a boy. A distraction she didn’t need.
Everyone stared at him silently. They were enjoying his stories and the news from outside. It was horrifying, but deep down they’d all suspected as much.
“You should wait until you’re healed.” Murray said. “Your people would understand.”
“Yeah, you have to wait.” Landon butted in. “You haven’t seen Sage ride Mr. Ringtail. You have to see that, its soooooo funny.”
“Bob doesn’t want to see a monkey ride your fox.” Swan said and caught those cobalt blue eyes staring at her. She bit the inside of her lip and narrowed her eyes. She channeled some of her anger to get the image of h
er fingers softly tracing his scars out of her mind. “But he owes the tribe a debt.”
“We saved your life.” She told him. “We nursed you back to health. We’ve sewn your clothes. You’ve eaten our food. You owe a debt.”
“He doesn’t owe us anything…” Harper started, but Swan cut her off.
“He does!” she demanded, her voice rising. “You have to pay for what you take.”
“I don’t have much.” Bob said. “I’ll give you my shirt. Or my jacket but I don’t have much else.”
“Swan wants his pants again.” Landon whispered. Swan kicked out at the small boy but Landon wasn’t about to let her nail him again and snatched his leg out of the way. She missed and muttered a curse as her toes found the bottom of the table.
Before Kodiak could cut her off, she said. “You have knowledge. You’ve traveled far from the looks of you. Are you any good with those guns? You can teach us.”
Kodiak paused, mouth open, whatever he was about to say forgotten.
“Can you?” he finally asked. “We’ve had trouble in the past and we expect more in the future.”
Kodiak knew guns were a bad idea around the animals. He knew the sound of gunfire was a beacon for any wandering horde or people who would harm them. Still, it seemed foolish to pass up a chance for the tribe to at least learn how to handle them and use them. He’d never forgive himself if something happened to one of his people because they couldn’t defend themselves.
The stranger hesitated, glanced out the window towards the road. It looked like he was going to refuse.
“I know where there is a good truck you can drive.” Vanessa said. “It’s already been zombie proofed with bars on the windows and things like that.”
“Yeah, the one at the grocery store.” Analise said. “We can help you get it if you teach us guns.”
The stranger considered then smiled.