by Chris Lowry
I wanted to tell him it wasn’t my idea to get shot. That some idiot with a rifle got lucky.
But I kept quiet.
And hoped my luck hadn’t run out. I needed it to hold til we reached Oviedo. Til we found Bis.
Then we could hole up someplace off the grid and I’d heal. With or without whiskey.
“Water,” I said. “I need water.”
Bem passed me a bottle and I sipped the sulfur tang of Florida’s aquifer, tried not to gag.
“We’re going to be fine,” I told them as I leaned back in the blanket.
My tired body was ready for a rest. I just needed to hold out for forty minutes. An hour tops.
Then we’d find her.
“Rest,” Anna tucked a blanket in around me.
A nap until we got there. That sounded good.
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
We didn't know it was over until it was. Bullets ripped through the side of the bus, shattering windows that fell in razor sharp bits of shrapnel. People screamed and ducked, fell to the floor, bits and bloody sprays arced across the seats.
Peg slumped out of the driver's seat, one hand gripped on the wheel. It yanked the bus sideways, carried it off the road. The long roaming home of ours for the past few weeks bounced off the asphalt, across slick grass and tilted.
The speed of the bus, the angle of the berm, all worked together and sent it tilting up on two wheels. A crazy stunt if it were a movie, but full of screaming men, women and children it was a rolling nightmare.
Gravity grabbed the roof and completed the tilt, slammed the side of the vehicle into the sandy brown dirt. It slid into a palm tree that crumpled a dent in the roof.
We were bounced around. Off the floor, into the side of the bus that was now the floor. Bodies jammed against cracked and blasted windows.
Screams of fear replaced with wails of terror, and pain and grief. Bullets still pinged off the undercarriage of the bus, but we were safer now, the thick iron acting as a shield.
It bought us time. Moments only, maybe. But time.
I stood up and grabbed the side of a seat above my head for balance. The world was still spinning, salty sticky blood leaking from a cut in my hair, another over that eye. My side burning like a hot poker shoved through it.
My hip hurt where I landed. Stiff, swollen.
"Rifle!" It came out as a croak.
Besides, no one was listening to me.
Weak light leaked through the shattered front windshield, a spiderweb of reflections on the wall of the bus. Now the floor.
Brian crawled, dragging an ankle as he skittered toward Peg. She lay at an awkward angle on the door, blood on her head, her arms, her face.
I took a step forward. My boot hit the rifle I wanted and I bent over to pick it up.
And woke up with a new scuff mark on my face. Barrel under my fingers. I gripped it and scooted to my back.
People still cried, wails and snuffles, so I must have only dropped for a second, maybe two.
Long enough for shadows to appear at the back door. Hands working the exterior handle.
I watched the emergency bar on the inside slip up in a half circle, a crack of light lining the upper edge of the door as the shadows stepped back to let it fall open.
Then the grip was in my hand, the stock against my shoulder as I sat up, let the tunnel vision narrow my field of focus to just the heads that appeared in the light.
Pop. Pop. Pop. Three dropped as they tried to peek in, the rest of the shadows fell back.
A hand grabbed me by the collar and yanked me behind a seat as they fired back. Bullets bit into the metal, sliced into the seats, puffed out bits of stuffing, but the layers kept most of us safe.
For a moment.
Byron grabbed Tyler and the Boy. Kicked out the shattered windshield and they began shooting before they rolled out.
I saw them split. Two toward the front of the bus. The Boy used the hood to climb to the side that was our roof. He pounded down it.
I could hear them shooting, firing. The chatter of their rifles as they concentrated fire on a position slightly behind us.
Their movement drew the hunters.
I shoved up, lurched to the open emergency door and leaned out. Took my time. Aimed. Fired.
Rat. A. Tat. Tat.
The gunfire stopped. Smoke drifted across the ambush sight. Dead bodies littered the asphalt above where we crashed.
The Boy dropped off the roof. Tyler and Byron limped around the front of the bus. Tyler cradled his left arm, blood cascading down the thin fabric of his shirt.
Hurt. But alive.
I didn't know if I could say that about the rest of us.
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
“We were lucky,” Brian cursed under his breath.
Damn lucky. I agreed with him. Our wounded were lined up in the shade of palm trees on the side of the road, resting on blankets. Bound. Bloodied. Battered.
But alive.
Even Peg, who was hurt the worst besides me. A slug sliced into the meat of her shoulder, bounced off the bone in the socket and took a nip from her neck as it kept going.
A nicked artery sounded bad, and she was white from blood loss. But alive.
All of us.
I fought back a wave of vertigo, let the world spin for a moment, and then it passed.
“You need to sit,” said Anna through swollen lips.
She had landed on her face in the tumble, smacked it against the metal edge of a seat.
Blood clotted in her hair, dried in sprinkles down her shirt.
I could see shadow figures lumber from the woods further back. Our Z friends coming to visit. Coming to check on us to see if we needed help.
Like good neighbors.
“See who can move,” I said.
“No one,” Brian snapped.
I watched him. Just watched him. He earned the right to snap because he was my best friend after the Z apocalypse. He had saved me. I had saved him.
I was ahead, but who kept count.
“Sorry,” he said and trudged to check on our wounded.
I rummaged through the wreckage where Tyler, the Boy and Byron stacked what we could salvage, and pulled a pike free.
A pike was Brian’s invention. Technically, it belonged to the middle ages, a throwback to a sharp bladed spear medieval foot soldiers used to jab, poke and stab their enemies in battle.
Brian just modified it for a new dark ages.
We took long metal fence poles, wrapped the handle in duct tape to make a better grip. Then jammed a machete blade into the far end, wrapped it in wire and tape to make sure it wouldn’t come loose in a fight.
Perfect for jabbing. Poking. Stabbing the Z.
Zombies. We called them Z. I think I started it, but it could be something I picked up along the way and just claimed credit for it. Like Brian claiming the five hundred year old pike as his own.
“You need help,” the Boy stopped and stared over my shoulder at the eight lumbering dead as they lurched toward our wreck.
“Finish up,” I said. “Pack all we can carry.”
I hefted the pike and balanced it in my hand. It was nine feet from tip to butt, and I appreciated the distance. In zombie moves or tv shows, the characters would get close and personal with the Z and stab them with three inch folding knives. Or hatchets.
Why risk the bite? Or splatter?
They also wore tank tops and shorts, then acted surprised when they were bit.
I glanced over my shoulder at my group. Even injured, they were covered neck to boot in layers of clothing.
Z weren’t super human. They could bite, and tear and rip. But they had to reach skin first.
And despite what any show might broadcast, clothes are tough to rip through.
Not impossible, but strong enough to buy seconds, and time, especially in a fight, is a commodity that can be exploited.
Time and distance.
I levered the pole and aimed the blade at Z number
one, sliced it down with a straight pop through a putrid eyeball and kept moving.
My side screamed. Or maybe it was me. If we had eaten last night, I would have thrown it up.
The Z kept coming.
Then Bem was there, and the Boy.
She shot four. He stabbed three.
In less than a minute, the rest of the Z were just as gone.
It was tough to call them dead, because that’s what we said the first time they died.
Now, they were gone.
Forever. Unless there was something about the virus we still didn’t understand.
Correction: there was everything about the virus we didn’t understand. Like how it started. What happened to the rest of the world. What was going to happen to us.
I rested between my kids, letting them hold me up for just a moment.
Then I stood up. As straight as I could, which wasn’t saying much.
They needed me. They all needed me. We were injured. Every one of us battered, bruised, bashed.
I just ignored the pain. The flush on my neck and face. The pounding in my head. Ignored it all, and focused on what to do next.
I wiped the ick off the blade on the rotten shirt of the last Z and turned back toward our crash site.
The boys worked on building packs for us to carry our meager supplies. Brian and Anna worked with the injured to get them up and ready to move.
We would be slow. Weighed down. Ripe for the picking from Z or more bandits.
And back in Florida.
One big freaking circle to find my youngest daughter.
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
"Do you think there are others out there like us?"
We stopped to rest again. This was the forth or fifth time. I couldn’t keep count. Hell, I couldn’t count to five unless I looked at my fingers.
We were stretched out against a fence that ran alongside the road, the other side cleared pastureland.
I looked at him and tried to wiggle my eyebrows. I don't think it worked as well as I thought. Swollen brow, bruised face and all.
"There's no one out there like you."
That earned a half grin, maybe three quarters though it was hard to tell from the squinting blurring vision the world offered through puffy eyelids.
"I mean roamers. Vagabonding in the Zombie apocalypse," he said. "We don't have a home. We don’t have a safe place to rebuild. We just go."
I tried to shrug. Bits hurt.
"I know, I know," he held up placating hands as if I was going to jump up and argue about it. "We're looking for your daughter. We have a mission and then we'll set up someplace safe. But are there people out there doing what we do?"
"Roaming," I croaked.
"Yeah."
"I bet there are."
Brian sighed and settled his back against the side of the fence.
"I wonder who many people we're losing doing that. As a species, I mean."
I almost told him I didn't care. But that wasn't true.
If I didn't care, I wouldn't have helped him and Peg, Anna, or Byron and Hannah. I wouldn't have helped any of the people we met along the way.
I could have just focused on the objective of getting the job done.
Sometimes caring sucked.
"We have to rebuild sometime," he said. "We can't wander the wasteland, nomadic tribes fighting Z, fighting each other. History showed us what we should do, but this time we get to skip all the bad decisions we made before. We get a do-over."
"Still bad men," I said. Or grunted. Probably grunts of the mono-syllabic type.
He understood me though.
“They did a study once," I mused.
"Just once?"
"This one, sure, though in all the world, I bet there are hundreds of studies."
"Were."
"Were hundreds," Brian corrected. "Thousands."
"Can I finish?"
"Probably not, but give it a go," he said.
"It was how fast the flu virus spread, before. They put some oil or fluid on a person's hand, then followed with a black light. It spread to a hundred people just on her way home from work. She would touch, they would touch," I demonstrated. "Pretty soon, it was everywhere."
"You think that's how Captain Z spreads?"
"Captain Z? Is that what you want to go with?"
He shrugged.
"I'm trying it on for size."
I shook my head. Starbursts coalesced at the corner of my vision.
"It should be more menacing," I said. "Captain Z sounds like a breakfast cereal."
"I'll keep trying."
"Do that."
"But the spread?"
"There were two stories going around the compound. Safe havens and a cure."
"Rumors," I said. "From who?"
"From whom?"
"That's what I'm asking you?"
“Do you think that wall was a safe haven?” he brought up the one we had seen north of Georgia outside the refugee camp.
“I don’t know if anywhere is safe,” I answered true.
He nodded.
We needed to get moving again. Needed to find transportation. Needed to find a safe place to sleep for one more night.
Needed to find her, and then we could sleep for days.
“Nobody move,” a voice called out behind us from the other side of the wire fence.
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
I moved. It was a half turn to see who was making the threat.
"Do you want to die?"
That was the question the man asked me on the other end of a hunting rifle.
I crossed half of America and back again to hunt for my kids, and now some ranch owner in the middle of Florida wants to know if I want to die.
Want? What's that?
"I don't," I said.
"That's good," he said with a smile. It didn't touch his eyes, just crinkled the wrinkles around his mouth.
Like he had practiced it a lot to share on a public face, but there was no way in hell he meant it.
"Get up," he didn't offer a hand to help.
I stood up on the edge of the road, put almost everything ounce of will in not groaning, and dusted my hands off on my pants.
"You're covered up good," he said, eyes appraising. "Says something about you."
"I'm an open book," I answered.
That earned a real chuckle.
"That I doubt."
"I'm a simple man. Simple man has simple questions."
"Doubt that more than the first one," the white haired man answered.
His eyes roamed over the rest of us.
“You look like crap,” he said.
His face was a map of wrinkles, thin hair brushed back from a broad forehead. He wore pants tucked into working cowboy boots, long sleeves covered up his skin, a long machete on one hip, pistol on the other.
“We’ve been better,” I said.
“What are you doing out here?” the rifle held steady in thick hands.
“Just passing through,” I told him.
He nodded up the road.
“More of the dead up there,” he said. “A lot more.”
“Lot where we came from too.”
He took that in and nodded.
“You’re bleeding.”
I glanced down. Blood soaked through the bandages wrapped around my waist. It brought it to mind and the pain flared up, a white hot poker jabbing me, stealing my breath, making the world wobble.
“I’m not beat the worst,” I said.
His eyes rested on Peg, covered in blood. Anna, the same. All of us, scraped, beat up and blood soaked.
“I’ve got a barn you can sleep in,” he said. “You get caught out here after dark and get bit, you might turn into my problem.”