Omega Days (An Omega Days Novel)
Page 24
“I’m starting a new book about all this. Maya gave me a journal and some pens, said I needed to write about this new world. She said the universe demanded it.”
Calvin scowled, but the corners of his eyes crinkled with mirth. “Evan, you don’t buy into that New Age hippie crap.”
Evan blushed. “It sounds more convincing when Maya says it.”
“Mmm-hmm.” Her father nodded, still frowning but eyes twinkling.
“Anyway, I’m on to my next project.” He pushed the book back to the older man. “Please, keep that.”
Calvin hugged him, even kissed him on the cheek, holding Evan’s book to his chest and nodding. “This is a true gift.” A while later he presented the pistol, apologizing and stressing that it was not any kind of trade for Evan’s words, that he just wanted the writer to have a sidearm for when things got close. Evan had never cared much about handguns, but the Sig was a thing of beauty, and it felt reassuring hanging under his armpit.
A fat kid in his early teens with one arm and half his face missing blundered around the same stack of tires and galloped toward him, fat rolls bouncing in a tight T-shirt. The Sig came out again, and this time Evan hit the mark with the first bullet, blowing the top of the fat kid’s head off.
Time to move.
He throttled the Harley and moved out into the intersection, making sure the horde followed: not too close, but not so far away that some might lose interest and wander back to the service plaza. He saw Calvin running back toward the green electrical box, so he roared over to meet him. Calvin hopped on the back, and Evan took them back up onto the highway.
“We’re in business,” Calvin yelled over the wind.
• • •
The raid worked. Evan went in first on the Harley while the caravan waited at the top of the ramp, the hippies watching through binoculars. He used the same tactic, drawing the dead together and leading them away, much farther this time, up a road he hadn’t scouted, which made him a little nervous. Behind him Calvin took the caravan in fast, the vehicles lining up two by two at the underground tanks, using a pair of hand pumps to fill each one before the next two pulled up. Every gun was trained outward, watching for the dead. Finally the spare cans were topped off and loaded back onto bumpers and roof racks.
Evan ran into trouble at an intersection half a mile away. The horde from the travel plaza was closing in from behind while more of the dead staggered out from between buildings and houses. He sat straddling his bike and fired every round from the Sig. Then he unslung the shotgun that he had carried ever since he had taken it from the police cruiser in Napa and emptied that as well. With something of a path cleared, he tucked low and rocketed between reaching arms. Fingernails scraped his jacket and tore open the sleeping bag on his handlebars, but he got through.
Back at the plaza, the caravan heard the distant gunfire. Calvin and Faith saw the way their daughter clutched her hands to her chest as she stared off in its direction. Maya climbed the aluminum ladder at the back of a camper and stood on the roof watching and waiting, climbing down only when the shape of a lone man on a motorcycle appeared on the road. She was smiling, and Calvin and Faith glanced at each other, smiling too.
The caravan fueled up without losing a single member. After that, Maya rode behind Evan on the Harley.
• • •
She was born both deaf and mute, something that surprised Evan, who’d thought she was only quiet. He didn’t even realize it until later that first night in camp, when he saw Maya signing with her mother. She was also very adept at reading lips.
The attraction was immediate for both of them, and coming together was as natural as breathing. There was no drama with some jealous would-be suitor or ex-boyfriend, and the other members of the Family reacted with smiles, as if it was supposed to happen. Maya started teaching Evan how to sign, used her hands to turn his face toward her when he was speaking, and communicated back by writing on a legal pad. Evan thought her handwriting was more beautiful than any angel’s and wanted nothing more than to drown in those sapphire eyes.
At night they talked and scribbled for hours, asking each other about their lives, where they had been, what they had seen, what they wanted. Evan wanted to see Bermuda; Maya wanted to go to Paris. It didn’t matter that they never would. They speculated about whether the government might have a secret lab someplace, where scientists were even now working on a cure. Maya’s uncle Dane butted into the conversation and announced that it was precisely one of those secret government labs that had unleashed a plague of the walking dead in the first place, and they waited until he walked away before laughing. Maya urged Evan to write every day. Sometimes she brought him coffee and would sit beside him, watching in fascination as his pen raced across the pages.
One evening, Evan passed by Calvin and Faith’s VW van and overheard them arguing inside.
“Her place is with us, Cal. I don’t want to discuss this,” Faith argued.
“Well, we need to discuss this. He can get her out of here, get her someplace safe,” Cal insisted.
“No.”
“Honey—”
“No, Calvin. I’m not letting Maya ride off so that we never see her again.”
“He’ll protect her. He’s a good man, Faith.”
“Our family needs to stay together.”
A disgusted snort. “Isn’t it enough that we’re taking the other kids into this nightmare? And it’s going to be bad, worse than any of us imagine. There’s going to be thousands of them . . . Christ, maybe millions. And for what? A fantasy. A ship that isn’t there.”
“It’s there! Goddamn you, Cal, that ship will be there if we just keep moving!”
A long pause, and then his voice, softer. “Please, Faith, let him take her out of here. Let at least one of our children live.”
“That ship will be there,” she repeated.
Evan felt dirty for listening in and did not share what he had heard with Maya. He thought about what Calvin said, though, and considered doing it on his own, just taking Maya away, making a life together. But he didn’t. He stayed.
The caravan looted on the move. Any time the tow truck stopped to deal with a blockage, people with empty backpacks, pry bars, and hand weapons would fall on the trucks and cars around them like jackals, searching for food and water, camping gear if they could find it, and the rare firearm. It was a system that seemed to work, but it was dangerous. Sometimes there were drifters still in the cars, or lurking in the shadowy corridors between them. One time Maya was moving with a scavenging group when a drifter lunged from beneath a station wagon, catching hold of her foot and biting into her ankle.
Its teeth didn’t get through the thick leather of her hiking boot.
The others quickly caved its head in with crowbars and pipes, and after that, Calvin insisted she not go anywhere Evan couldn’t see her. Evan was more shaken up than Maya, and he took her by the shoulders and practically yelled her father’s instruction. Maya giggled silently and nodded, then hugged him close.
For Evan Tucker, it ceased to be a great romantic adventure just outside El Cerrito. He and Maya were motoring slowly through abandoned cars, scouting the obstacles that the tow truck would have to handle, the caravan a mile to their rear. They stopped for a few minutes and, after a careful look around to ensure there was no immediate threat, grinned at each other and started kissing, hands exploring one another, both of them wishing they had a room, a bed, something other than the seat of a Harley.
The cry came from the right, and Evan froze. Maya felt the sudden change in him and pulled back, searching his face.
It was an infant’s cry.
Ahead of them was a tangle of vehicles all facing north on the southbound lanes, those who had tried to take advantage of the less crowded side of the highway rather than sit in stopped traffic. A white uniform-service truck sat on top of a yellow Smart car, crushing it like a beer can, and behind that a beige Lincoln Navigator had apparently swerved to avoid hi
tting them and gone up onto a guardrail, where it became stuck. The cries were coming from there.
Evan and Maya approached slowly. Both the driver and passenger doors hung open, and as they got close there was a buzz of flies and the reek of rotting flesh. The front seats were empty, the smooth, caramel leather sticky with splashes of old blood. Flies landed there, buzzed off, and landed again. A woman’s shoe was on the floorboards of the passenger side next to a pink, overturned diaper bag with a bottle of spoiled formula poking out of it. The rear passenger window was broken, fragments glittering on the road. The cry came again from inside, high and plaintive, a squeaking wail. Then there was the sound of a rattle.
Maya shook her head as Evan moved forward, but he paid no attention, stepping up and looking inside. The infant seat was secured in the center, a plastic mobile of little rattles, mirrors, and a stuffed crocodile mounted above it. The infant screeched again, and a little hand batted at the mobile, making one of the rattles spin.
“Oh my God,” Evan whispered, yanking open the rear door and scrambling in before Maya could stop him. How could a baby still be alive after this long?
It wasn’t.
Eight months old and wearing pink pajamas covered in dried, blackened gore, the little girl had a sizable bite of meat and fabric missing from her left shoulder. Her skin was gray and covered in dark blotches, and once-brown eyes were filmy and pale. Locked in with a five-point restraint harness, the infant saw Evan and let out a tiny screech, clumsy hands grabbing and tangling with the mobile.
Evan stared at her, and she screeched again like a tiny, wounded animal. Starving, he thought. Locked in there forever and starving.
He climbed back out and turned to Maya, signing the word baby. She hugged him fiercely, and he buried his face in her hair and cried. This is the world, he thought, back there thrashing in a car seat. Eventually he pulled away and wiped his eyes on his sleeve, unable to look up. One of Maya’s hands gently lifted his chin so he could see her. She held his face in both hands for a moment and then touched the butt of the pistol in his shoulder holster. She nodded and turned away.
Evan stood near the Navigator’s door for a long time, the nine-millimeter in his hand, looking up at a brilliant blue September sky where mountains of white clouds drifted by at a stately, unhurried pace. Then he looked at the silent metal graveyard all around them, and back at the thing struggling in the car seat.
This is the world.
Maya didn’t jump when the pistol went off.
TWENTY-SEVEN
San Francisco—South of Market
SoMa—South of Market—was a collection of neighborhoods adjacent to the Mission District, resulting in an eclectic mixture of architecture: Victorian and early twentieth century nestled amid steel and glass. They moved through a steady rain, the sky a flat sheet of charcoal lit by flashes of lightning. Alden and Tricia had found hooded Windbreakers, and Snake wore a baseball cap, but it did little to help. They were soaked and chilled. Concrete tangles of elevated roadways loomed ahead, the point where Highway 101 from San Jose met I-80 and continued on to feed the Bay Bridge. Getting underneath and beyond would be a real mile marker on their journey.
Sneakers and boots splashed through streets strewn with trash, unmoving cars, broken glass, and the occasional motionless body. Luggage and overturned shopping carts rested near fallen bicycles and, in one case, a wheelchair lying on its side. The sight of that overturned, empty chair caused Tricia to stop and stare, frozen, until Pulaski jerked her arm and barked at her to keep moving. They saw a few cats hiding under cars, staying out of the rain, but the rats had no such concerns. Emboldened by the sudden absence of humans, they moved about in the daytime, feeding on whatever they found.
SoMa was a diverse collection of condos, nightclubs, and small parks, with galleries and trendy cafés on the same blocks as run-down residential hotels and pawnshops. For blocks they had traveled without seeing the walking dead, and it was an invitation to move into the center of the street, where they could go faster instead of creeping along sidewalks and ducking into alleys. After weeks of moving only two or three blocks a day, feeling as if they would never escape this place, finally they were making some time. It made Xavier nervous. Where were the dead?
They came within half a block of the elevated freeway, long ribbons of concrete arcing high above on thick support columns, their mass and the gloom of the day casting deep shadows on the street passing underneath. “Oh, hell yes!” said Snake, breaking away from the group and jogging toward a brick building on the left. A metal accordion security gate was pulled across the front window, but the door stood open and unprotected. An image on the window depicted a skateboard, the words HOOD RATZ beneath it in red lettering.
“Snake, careful . . .” Xavier called.
He wasn’t.
The twelve-year-old, still carrying his baseball bat, trotted inside the skate shop without checking first, and the screaming began at once. Xavier and Pulaski started running toward the shop as half a dozen of the walking dead staggered out through the door and onto the sidewalk. A few had fresh blood on their faces and hands, and one was chewing something red.
Xavier’s AK-47 and Pulaski’s shotgun came up at the same time, the two men side by side as the corpses dragged toward them through the rain. Both fired, hitting chests and arms and faces, the quiet street suddenly a shooting range. Alden ran to Tricia and held on to her, his pistol in one hand as he nervously scanned the surrounding buildings.
Then it was over, the dead facedown on the wet asphalt, the last echo of gunfire fading. In its place, an odd humming sound came from above. Eyes turned upward to the shapes appearing at the edge of the elevated freeway. Five, ten, two dozen, more and more corpses gathering at the concrete guardrail, looking down at the people in the street, their collective moans gathering as a low hum. Fifty, a hundred, strung out in a line in both directions, more behind them as the dead packed the edge of the freeway, arms reaching out and down. Still more crowded in, and then they began climbing over.
Two corpses fell a hundred feet and smacked onto the road. Another dropped, then five more in succession, hitting with dull cracks.
“Run,” said Xavier, dropping his empty magazine and shoving in a new one.
“We have to get Snake,” Tricia said.
“He’s dead,” said Pulaski, trotting toward the freeway and feeding fresh shells into the shotgun. Alden tugged at Tricia’s Windbreaker, but she wouldn’t move.
“We can’t leave him!”
“He’s dead. Run!” Xavier ran toward the bodies still thumping onto the road. A couple split open when they hit, the rest crumpled as their bones fractured, but only one landed on its head and didn’t move. The others pulled themselves up, limping and broken. Ten fell at once, making a rippling sound like a drumroll. The four survivors ran to the right to avoid them, and a falling body nearly landed on Alden, hitting the ground only a few feet away with a sickening crack. Tricia screamed, and the schoolteacher gripped her Windbreaker and hauled her along.
They were under the freeway, in the shadows and running. Shapes emerged from behind concrete pillars, but they were hardly worth noticing. Behind them the dropping bodies turned into a waterfall of flesh, hundreds of corpses pouring over the side of the highway above, hitting so fast their impact sounded like bursting popcorn. Hundreds more dropped, and Xavier risked a backward glance to see an unending curtain of free-falling bodies, hitting and getting back up. How many were up there? Why were they up there? Were they trying to cross the bridge and got distracted by the gunfire?
The questions didn’t matter, because as soon as they emerged from the darkness of the underpass, corpses began raining down from the near side of the freeway as well, spilling over the side like a pot of water filled past its rim. The street behind them was soon filled with the ravenous dead; there were thousands, and more falling every second. Bodies appeared ahead and to the sides, walking out of parking lots and open loading bays, emerging f
rom alleys and behind parked trucks. Xavier stopped, braced the rifle, and fired at the closest ones, Pulaski doing the same. Behind them Alden’s pistol went off.
“Keep moving,” Xavier shouted, leading them through gaps in the dead cleared by the gunfire. Pulaski was behind him, his shotgun going off when something got too close, and Alden pulled Tricia along at the back. They passed warehouses that had been turned into lofts and design studios, bars and workshops, fenced-off truck depots and auto repair yards where corpses stood growling and shaking the chain link. A tangle of ghouls stumbled out the door of a city bus ahead of them, and Xavier slid to a stop to unload his assault rifle at them, shell casings rattling through puddles, the crack of the rifle filling the street.
They kept running.
At Sixteenth Street Xavier led them east. A half mile away, the elevated span of I-280 stretched over the neighborhood, and if they stayed on Sixteenth they would have to pass beneath it. Another waterfall of the dead? Xavier couldn’t think about that. In order to reach the water they would have to get past it, and that distance looked like forever.
“Father!” Tricia yelled.
Xavier stopped and turned, seeing Alden and Tricia farther back than he’d thought they were. Alden was bent over, his hands on his knees. Tricia was tugging at him, looking around, uncertain whether she should stay or run.
“Let’s go!” Pulaski shouted, not stopping. Tricia let go of Alden and started running, passing Xavier as he headed back to the schoolteacher. Beyond, only blocks back, the priest saw the street filling with a mass of the dead packed curb to curb.
“Alden, we have to go,” Xavier said, resting a hand on the teacher’s back, feeling the thud of the man’s heart. “Do you have any nitro tablets?”
The man shook his head, his voice coming in gasps. “Never . . . found any. I’ll be . . . okay . . . just . . . rest . . .”