In fact, as more and more militia members were materializing off the side of the street with guns raised, it became apparent that they were a small army.
“Shoot out their tires!” they could hear someone else calling out and the gunfire opened up again.
“Dammit!” Jon cursed. “They take out are tires we’re done for!”
Roy rolled down the windows on his side.
“Roy, what are you doing?!” Josie asked in amazement.
“Keeping us safe!” Roy responded, and opened fire with his AR-15.
BOOM BOOM BOOM BOOM BOOM BOOM BOOM
The AR was so incredibly loud in the confined space of the Suburban that Josie’s ears went ringing. She buried Alex under her body to protect her while covering up her ears as best she could.
The bug out had begun!
Chapter 31
Roy’s AR-15 clicked empty and he ejected the magazine, allowing it to spill out onto the road. He clumsily inserted a fresh one through the window, chambered a round, and continued firing again.
The militia members were firing at the Suburban from all sides, the bullets striking the aluminum sheetmetal and ballistic nylon layers that Jon had installed.
Roy had managed to take down a couple of the militia members, forcing several to dive for cover on their own, as Jon applied as much pressure to the gas pedal with his foot as he could.
Firing the rifle through the window of the fast moving Suburban was incredibly difficult even for an experienced soldier such as Roy, and the fact that there were numerous bumps and potholes in the road wasn’t helping anything either. His shots were being sent all over the place, several finding their mark in the trees and buildings that served as the backdrop behind the militia members he was trying to hit.
Soon, however, the gunfire came to a stop as the Suburban sped on fast down the road.
“Why did they stop shooting?” Josie asked.
“They’re falling behind,” Roy
“Did you hear that back there?” Josie asked.
“Hear what?” Roy was reloading his AR-15 in the shotgun seat.
“They said ‘hold fire,’” Josie said. “They didn’t want to kill us. They only wanted to shoot out our tires.”
“We can’t go back now,” Jon said.
“But why didn’t they want to kill us?” Josie pressed. “They never wanted to kill us. They wanted us alive.”
“Then let’s go back and ask them why,” Roy said sarcastically.
“Dammit,” said Jon.
“What?’”
“We’ve got more company.”
Roy glanced at the rearview mirror, which revealed three motorcycles coming up behind them and closing in fast. He quickly finished reloading the AR-15 and chambered another round. “Here we go again.”
Roy rolled down the window to the Suburban again and leaned out with his rifle. He opened fire again on the motorcycles. Previously all three were closely bundled together, but once he had fired his first few shots they began to spread out across the open road to avoid drawing all of his fire.
“Hold fire, buddy,” Jon said. “Wait for them to get closer. I’ll slow down a little.”
“SLOW DOWN?!” Roy couldn’t believe it.
“You wAlex take them out or not?” Jon asked.
Jon eased his foot slowly over the gas pedal.
“Ben, how you doing back there?” Josie glanced back at Ben in the back, who was still sprawled out over his stretcher that was in turn laid out over the gear.
“As good as I can do,” Ben murmured with both hands wrapped tightly about his ears to shield them from Roy’s gunfire.
“You bleeding anymore?” Josie asked.
Ben shook his head.
Suddenly, a series of pistol bullets struck the Suburban! The men on the motorcycles were firing handguns!
Roy leaned out of the Suburban again and took quick but careful aim through the scope of his AR-15, getting the center crosshairs to line up perfectly over the upper torso of the motorcyclist that was furthest to the left and closing in fast.
BOOM!
The 5.56 bullet struck the motorcyclist in the chest and he fell back from his motorcycle in a visible spray of blood. The motorcycle continued traveling on with out him until it barreled into a tree where it was halted dead in its tracks.
“One down,” Roy said.
The other two motorcyclists came up behind the Suburban on the opposite side of Roy’s side.
Roy leaned out of the Suburban window again. “Dammit, I can’t see them!”
Jon slammed the breaks of the Suburban and one of the motorcycles crashed head on into the fortified bumper. The driver was sent lurching forward and was crushed between the impact of the motorcycle and the SUV together.
“One more down,” Jon said. “One left.”
The third and final motorcyclist came up to the side of the Suburban, running even and parallel to Jon’s side.
Jon rolled down the window while also drawing his Taurus Judge that he had placed in between the center console and front seat.
He pointed the gun at the motorcyclist and FIRED!
BOOM!
All three 9mm-sized pellets exited the Judge’s wide barrel and struck the motorcyclist in the helmet, shoulder, and torso respectively, sending him and the motorcycle crashing into a ditch where a spray of dirt kicked up upon impact in a fantastic display.
“All down,” Jon rolled up the window and re-holstered the Judge.
“Where’s the Land Rover?” Roy asked.
“We’re not there yet,” Jon responded.
Roy was staring down the road.
“No, Jon, we parked it right up here. I know we did.”
“No, buddy, it’s gotta be up a ways longer.”
“No Jon, I am telling you, we parked it right up over there. The Land Rover’s not there anymore, they took it!”
“Watch out!” Josie called out.
Her eyes had picked up what Jon and Roy had failed to: a line of nail boards across the road facing up.
Jon instantly hit both feet over the brakes but it was too late as the front tires of the Suburban skidded in a thick cloud of smoke over to the nail boards and with a loud thunderous crack blew out immediately upon making contact!
“Dammit, hold on!” Jon had lost control of the Suburban as it swerved from side to side.
The momentum of the Suburban built even further when the back tires were penetrated by the nail boards as well and the massive vehicle swung around like a carousel at the carnival!
No matter how tightly Jon held onto the steering wheel, it was over. The Suburban made two complete three sixty turns, going off the road where it finally crashed front first into a tree!
The air bags exploded into Jon’s face. Though dazed from the crash his left hand managed to find the door handle so he could twist it and kick the door open.
He stumbled out and fell to his knees.
Two men each armed with pistols emerged from the woods, the men who had set the trap.
“Arms up!” one of them said as they approached Jon with their pistols raised.
Jon feigned being wounded and disoriented as he raised himself to this feet and then stumbled around a little.
“I said arms up!” the first of the two men repeated.
“Can’t see anything, can’t see anything,..” Jon murmured as he continued staggering about.
Suddenly, with lightning fast speed, Jon drew one of his Glocks from its holster while throwing himself against the road. He fired a total of six shots by the time he had fully hit the ground (and severely bruised his shoulder in the process), and both of the men lay dead on the ground.
Jon pulled himself back up to his feet and scanned the area for more hostiles. None that he could see.
He returned to the Suburban.
“Is everybody alright?” he asked.
“We’re fine, we’re fine!” Josie held onto Alex in the back.
“My leg’s kinda
weird…” Roy grunted, clearly dazed and half unconscious.
Josie leaned over to the front to see that Roy’s leg was now bleeding profusely through his pant leg.
“Over there!” Jon could hear shouting.
He glanced up over the Suburban, and a few hundred yards up the road where they had just come from, he could see several dozen militia members running straight for them as one massive horde.
“They’re coming!”
“Can you move, Roy?” asked Josie.
“I don’t know…AH!” Roy yelled in pain as he tried to move his leg.
“Jon, take Alex and get outta here!” Josie screamed.
“What about you guys?” Jon asked, surprised.
“Take her and go!” Josie insisted, virtually handing Alex to Jon through the door.
“Mom what are you doing?!” Alex screamed.
“Go Alex, you need to go with Jon!” Josie insisted. “Get out of here and get out of here fast!”
“Come with us!” Jon said, taking Alex through the door and setting her down on the ground.
“I’m not leaving Roy and Ben!” Josie said.
The militia men up the road were closing in fast, about half as closer as they were previously.
“MOM, NO!” Alex burst out crying.
“Jon, take her and go, put as much space between us and yourselves now!” Josie cried back. “Alex, dad and I we’ll find you again, I promise we will!”
Jon picked up the crying Alex and carried her away into the trees where they disappeared.
Initially Josie could still hear Alex’s cries quite clearly, but soon they became more distant and faint the more Jon carried her away into the woods.
Chapter 32
Ben heard two words that he had wished he would never have to hear again in his entire life.
“Benny boy!”
There was only one person on the entire planet who would have said those two words to him, and even if he hadn’t used those two words ‘Benny Boy’ specifically, Ben still would have instantly identified who it was based on the voice alone, regardless of which words were used.
A pair of hands grabbed Ben tightly by the ankles and tried to drag him out of the back of the Suburban.
“No, no, no!” Ben started to say and tried to resist, but it was too late as he was yanked off of his stretcher and out of the Suburban and fell to the dirt like a sandbag.
The moment his body made hard contact with the ground, Ben screamed as the force of the body-wide blow exasperated all of the pain he was already feeling from the gunshot wounds.
He grimaced and clenched his teeth, closing his eyes and trying to control the mercilessly intense and internal burning that had gripped itself over the inside of his body.
When Ben opened his eyes again, just when the pain was beginning to ebb a little away, he found himself staring in absolute horror into the two dark and furious eyes of the man he feared most.
“We meet again, Benny boy!” Ojo was grinning and revealing all of his golden teeth.
Ben winced. Those teeth, in all their shiny glory, had always seemed so disgusting to him, but even more so now.
And really, he wasn’t all that shocked to see Ojo standing over his face now. Being shot up so badly and bedridden had taken a significant toll on him. The world just seemed so unrealistic, as if everything were a dream and anything could happen. Running into Ojo again was inevitable and unavoidable.
“Fate has returned you to me, Benny boy!” Ojo continued, as excited as a young and innocent visiting the ice cream shop or toy store, the only difference being that Ojo was hardly so innocent. “Surely you must understand that, at least.”
Ben said nothing as his enemy began to prod his body around with a stick. Keeping his mouth shut seemed like the very best thing that he could do right now.
“In the time since we last saw each other, Benny boy, I’d say you’ve had it rougher than I had, that’s for sure,” Ojo continued to prod around Ben’s body with the stick.
Suddenly, the edge of the stick found one of the bullet wounds and Ben screamed again.
Ojo’s eyes went wide and he released the pressure from the stick to provide relief to Ben, who calmed down but continued to breathe heavily.
“So, I wasn’t the only poor bastard who shot you!” Ojo exclaimed. “Boy oh boy Benny boy, it seems like you’re a bullet magnet! That’s a good way to die in these parts, but you just keep truckin’ on!”
“If you’re gonna kill me, just get it over with,” Ben spoke to Ojo for the first time.
As far as Ben could tell, his life was over anyway. The bug out had failed and the Suburban was destRoyed. Roy and Josie were prisoners and Jon and Alex had disappeared into the woods. They had lost, and that was that. What was there left to live for at this point?
“Are you surprised?” Ojo asked.
“Surprised?” Ben was confused as he contemplated his anticipated upcoming death that he was fully prepared for.
“Surprised to see me of course!” Ojo laughed. “I bet back at that dirt mount homestead you thought you had seen the last of me, didn’t you? I must whole heartedly concede, amigo, that when I saw you go down that it was the end of you too. Took the bullet like a champ!”
Ojo was just as Ben had remembered: careless, excited, loud, boisterous, and dangerous.
It was only then that Ben’s eyes shot around and he noticed other militia members standing around him as well, all armed.
“It’s been a long story since you saw me last,” said Ojo. “As you can see, I’ve made some new friends. Just like you.”
Out of the corner of Ben’s eye, he could spot Josie and Roy forced on their front sides over the dirt and having their hands tied behind their backs. Both of them were still apparently unconscious and motionless.
“I don’t want to hurt your feelings, Benny boy,” Ojo just wouldn’t shut up. “But I’m not in this excited mood right now because I found you. No, my amigo! The real reason I’m so excited, is because I found this guy over here!”
Ojo grabbed Ben by the shirt collar and dragged him over to Roy and Josie.
“Drag the bitch away,” Ojo instructed the militia men standing around. “I only want this one.”
As instructed, the militia men dragged Josie away while leaving Roy for Ben. But hot was it that they were now following Ojo’s orders?
“I want you to watch this,” Ojo told Ben.
He then kicked Roy over onto this back.
“Wake up, wake up, you bastard!” Ojo slapped Roy repeatedly across the face, and he awoke.
“Do you know who I am?” Ojo asked.
Roy didn’t say anything or even show an ounce of emotion on his facial expressions. Ben admired that. Only now, he realized that screaming out whenever his pain was worsened made him look incredibly weak in the eyes of Ojo.
“I very politely asked you…” Ojo started to say. “DO YOU KNOW WHO I AM?!”
Ojo punched Roy hard against his face. “DO YOU?!”
Roy shook his head, refusing to say a word. His intense military training was now kicking in. He could resist a lot of pain and simply receiving a punch and a scream in the face wasn’t going to force him to say anything.
“You’re right,” said Ojo. “You don’t know me. But do you want to know who you did know?”
Again, Roy was motionless and emotionless. Just so completely still as if no one was even threatening him right now. Ben looked away, not wanting to watch Ojo rip off half of Roy’s face with a bullet if that’s what it came to, but he couldn’t help but listen to the entire encounter.
“Dominic,” Ojo told Roy, and he was now much more serious both in terms of the tone of his voice and of his facial expressions. “Dominic. You knew Dominic. My only blood brother. And you took him from me. You didn’t even know his name, did you? Do you remember? The night three men came to your house. You killed one of them. Do you remember?”
Roy thought. Of course he remembered. That night barely
a week ago, when he and Josie had awoken to the loud echoing thunder of something heavy being dropped downstairs, and when Roy had gone to investigate, it had resulted in a jacketed hollow point 9mm bullet being delivered straight into the skull of the home intruder he physically confronted.
It was that night that had served as the catalyst for everything that had transpired sense. Roy cursed himself internally. The two other home invaders had gotten away, and far too easily. If only he had been able to take both of them down like he had the first, they never would have gotten back to their gang to give away the homestead’s location.
“You,” Roy spoke and sneered at Ojo, finally putting two-and-two together and recognizing who he was. “You’re the one who attacked my homestead.”
“Yeah, I did,” Ojo replied. “But only because of the blood brother you took from me!”
Ojo struck Roy hard multiple times across his face and brow. Ben winced from each blow he heard.
“And do you want to know something else?” Ojo asked when he finished beating Roy. “Do you want to know how I was able to find your little shitty homestead to begin with?”
Roy didn’t say anything.
“ANSWER!” Ojo suddenly drew a machete and held the edge of the blade to Roy’s throat.
“Because two men got away,” Roy reluctantly obeyed and answered. “I would have killed them, I swear to God if they were only a little slower….”
“SHUT UP!” Ojo screamed. “You wAlex know who one of those getaways were, the one who led me back to your place?”
Ben’s heart stopped.
Ojo then placed the cold steel of the flat of the machete’s blade against Roy’s temple and tilted it over so Roy was now facing Ben.
“That’s right,” Ojo said. “You’re looking at him now.”
Roy couldn’t believe it. Ben could see the shock and surprise conquering his face.
“You?” Roy asked.
“I’m…I’m sorry,” was all Ben could say.
Roy yelled furiously at Ben’s admission and immediately flung himself over him. Ben was completely helpless as Roy delivered punch after punch to his face.
Dawn of Destruction Page 20