The Purge of Babylon Series Box Set, Vol. 2 | Books 4-6
Page 117
“That bad, huh?” she said as he walked back to them.
“What’s that?” he said.
“I saw your reaction.”
“What reaction?”
She frowned. “The good news is, I still have one good eye.”
“That’s definitely good news.”
“The bad news…”
“There’s bad news?”
“Oh, yeah.”
“Which would be?”
“I don’t know how to shoot with my left eye. I usually squint with my right when I’m aiming.”
“Most people do.”
He put the weapons down on the ground in front of her. The damned things seemed to have doubled in weight since he stepped out of the house and made the long walk back to the marina. Of course, it could just be his sore shoulder and thigh. Keo unslung his pack and pulled out boxes of bullets, stacking them next to the guns.
Jordan picked up a Colt AR-15 and turned it over. “Am I wrong, or do you expect this to go on for a while?”
He nodded. “If we’re lucky, yeah.”
“‘If we’re lucky’?” Dave said. “Your definition of luck sucks.”
“Desperate times call for desperate luck,” Keo said. He picked up a box of 5.56mm rounds. “Catch,” he said, and tossed it.
Dave caught it with one hand. “That’s a lot of bullets.”
“It’s really not, but it’ll have to do for now. You good with the M4?”
“One’s enough for me.” He patted the Walther P22 in his back waistband. “I still got this.”
“What happened to your fancy German gun?” Jordan asked Keo.
“Jack took it,” he said.
“Miller’s little brother? The one Dave—”
“Yeah.”
“Oh.”
Dave groaned. “I didn’t even want to shoot the guy. Or the other soldier in the living room.”
“So why did you?” Keo asked.
“I didn’t know Jack would be inside Bannerman’s garage. But there he was, and the stupid asshole went for his gun. Then the soldier comes barging in, right at me.” Dave shook his head. “It got bad really fast.”
“It usually does when guns are involved.”
Keo picked up a Mossberg pump-action shotgun with a pistol grip and slung it, then opened a box of shells and began shoving them into the leg pockets of his cargo pants.
“You didn’t happen to get me one of those, did you?” Jordan asked.
“As a matter of fact, I did.” He picked up a Remington 870 from the bundle and handed it to her. “Designed for the fairer sex.”
“I’m touched.” Jordan clutched and unclutched the weapon. “I gotta admit, it feels pretty good.”
“That’s the point.” He handed her another box of shells. “Use it in close quarters. The AR-15 for everything else.”
He handed her a spare gun belt and she put it on, then slid the Glock he had given her earlier into the empty holster.
“How’s the body?” he asked.
“Why, you wanna cop a feel?”
He smiled, and she returned it.
“Maybe later,” he said. “Can you walk without pain?”
“I can’t even breathe without pain.” She looked down at her chest, as if she could see past the raincoat to where Steve had cut her with his knife. “They’re going to scar, aren’t they?”
“Yeah.”
“There goes my meet cute moment with Prince Charming. Hard to make a good first impression with bodily scars.”
“You’ll get by.”
She frowned.
“Are you sure you’re okay?” he asked.
She nodded and gave him her best forced smile. “You got shot twice last night, and you’re still running around. So I’ll be a big girl and suck it up.”
“Good. You’re going to need to move around, or you’re going to be a sitting duck. I’ll do what I can to keep the both of you alive, but you’re going to have to do your part, too.”
“Relax. I know you’re the badass with the past, but it’s been half a year since you last trained me, and I’ve picked up a thing or two while I was with Tobias.”
“Yeah, what she said,” Dave added.
Despite all three of them having unwittingly drunk enough water last night during the rainstorm to last a lifetime, they were all parched by midday and desperate for liquid. Keo knew exactly where to find them and went looking for houses with exterior access to the rooftops. He thought it would hurt the more he moved around, but thanks to a combination of Jay’s painkillers and constant motion, the pain started to ebb into the background.
It took him a half dozen homes to find the same one he had spotted Gene on top of the other day. There was a long extension ladder in the back of the house that he used to climb up to the rooftop, where he found a pair of two-liter plastic soft drink bottles duct-taped to the pole of a satellite dish. They were both almost topped off thanks to last night’s rain. Keo looked around but couldn’t find the caps, so he reused the duct tape to cover up the bottles and carried them down one at a time.
Dave was now on the other side of the island, keeping an eye on the eastern marina, when Keo handed him one of the bottles, then walked across the island to Jordan’s position, stopping just once to take more of the painkillers, silently thanking Jay for being so damn well-stocked.
Jordan glanced over as he walked back to her. “You went shopping without me? I hope you at least got me something nice.”
She was at Dave’s old position overlooking the marina, the AR-15 leaning against a boulder nearby, and she had the Remington slung over one shoulder. From up here, she could see all of the marina and the Texas coastline. They were in a perfect position to spot any approaching boats, because there weren’t a lot of places to hide out there.
Their twenty-footer was still tied to the dock below them, and easy enough to spot from a distance. That was the point. All he needed was to draw Steve in and they could unleash on him and his men. Of course, that was assuming Steve would be approaching from the west. If he decided to come from the east, they’d have to run over to back up Dave.
He had a fifty-fifty chance of being right, which was pretty good odds these days.
“Water?” Jordan said when she saw what he was carrying.
He handed her the bottle. “Drink up.”
She pulled off the duct tape and didn’t stop drinking until she was splashing water down her chin.
“Oh my God, that hit the spot,” she said, handing the bottle back to him. “Rain water?”
He nodded and drank some himself. It wasn’t Evian, but it wasn’t salt water, so he couldn’t really complain.
“Found any food?” she asked.
“Not yet.”
“But you think they’re around?”
“Gene, the kid I told you about, hid a lot of things around the island. He called them go-bags. Of course, finding them is another matter.”
“Big island.”
“Eight kilometers.”
“Yup. Big island.”
Keo sat down next to her, trickled some water onto a rag, and dabbed at his forehead. The cut, courtesy of Tobias’s “love tap,” had scabbed over, and it itched more than it hurt. He felt Jordan’s eyes on him the whole time.
“You need to stop going around and pissing off people, Keo,” she said. “That pretty face of yours can only take so much.”
He chuckled. “Thanks.”
“No offense.”
“None taken.”
“I mean, you’re still not bad looking, but adding in that love tap from Tobias and those two bullet holes, and you’ve definitely seen better days.”
“Stop trying to butter me up,” he said, and handed the bottle back to her.
She drank again, and this time didn’t stop until there was just half remaining in the container. “I’m starving,” she said when she was done.
“You already said that.”
“Well, just in case you forgot.�
��
“I haven’t.”
She sighed and leaned back against the boulder.
“There’s a bright side in all of this,” he said.
“Oh yeah? Pray tell.”
“Steve’s coming soon, and he’ll probably bring some food.”
“That’s the bright side?”
“I mentioned he’d probably be bringing some food with him, right?”
“I’ve missed your screwed up sense of humor, Keo. By which I mean, I haven’t really missed it.”
They sat quietly for a few minutes, listening to birds chirping as they swarmed the wide-open skies above them. Even the sloshing of the ocean was calming, as if last night’s rainstorm had drained the sea of its power and it was only now starting to regain its strength. It was so peaceful he wanted to close his eyes and go to sleep.
He did close his eyes, but he didn’t go to sleep. That wasn’t going to happen for a while, no matter how tired or sore or numbed he was. Instead of lingering on what he couldn’t control, Keo spent the next few minutes swapping out the bandages with fresh ones.
“Need a hand?” Jordan asked.
“Nah, I got it.”
“I was just trying to be nice. I hate the sight of blood.” She watched him working for a moment before asking, “So what’s the deal with you and Gillian?”
He didn’t answer right away, because he didn’t know how, though the more he thought about it, the more simple the answer was. So much so that it pained him to finally realize it.
The deal with him and Gillian? There was no deal. That was the painful truth of it.
“She has Jay and the baby,” he finally said. “I guess that’s the deal.”
“Sorry.”
“Yeah, well, it is what it is.” He finished up and shoved the supplies back into the pack. “When you were with Tobias, did you ever shoot anyone?”
“I’ve shot plenty of people.”
“Maybe I should say, did you ever kill anyone?”
“I don’t know.” She shook her head. “There were a lot of skirmishes and bullets were always flying, but if you’re asking me if I’m one hundred percent certain I killed someone during those moments, then no. I can’t say for sure if I’ve ever killed anyone or not.”
“What about that ambush at the strip mall? The day I showed up?”
“By the time I got there, Tobias had already sounded the retreat. I fired a magazine into where I thought there were some soldiers, but again…”
“You can’t be sure.”
“I can’t be sure. Sorry.”
“That’s nothing to be sorry about.”
“Considering what’s about to show up soon, I think there is. You don’t know if you can count on me.”
“That’s not true.”
“No?”
“I know I can count on you.”
She looked at him seriously. “How?”
“The same way I knew I could count on you to keep Gillian and the others safe back at the cabin.”
“And I did a hell of a good job with that. Gillian and I got captured, Mark’s dead, and Rachel and…” She let the rest go unsaid.
“But you got them safely away from the cabin and here, just like I knew you would. What happened after that was out of your control.”
“You weren’t there...”
“You did the best you could.”
She wasn’t convinced, and turned her head and looked over at the solitary houses that lined both sides of the street instead.
“You should have been there with us, Keo,” she said finally. “Things would have turned out differently if you had been.”
“I know,” he said quietly. “I know…”
Chapter Twenty-Six
“They’re not coming,” Keo said.
“How can you be sure?” Jordan asked.
Keo didn’t have to look at his watch, thanks to the sight of the setting sun. The calm, clear skies weren’t darkening just yet, but it wouldn’t be long now. Maybe another hour, maybe less. In the back of his mind, he still remembered the speed with which yesterday had darkened.
“They would be here by now if they were coming,” he said.
“Maybe he’s dead. Steve. You said it yourself; you couldn’t see anyone back at the marina, just silhouettes. One of them could have been Steve. If he’s dead, would they still come after us?”
It was a fair question, and she had a point. It had been unfathomably dark back there, and he and Dave were shooting at everything that wasn’t them. One of the bodies spilling out of Marina 1 could very well have been Steve.
Or was that just him trying to be overly optimistic?
“Maybe,” he said.
“You didn’t answer my question. Would they still come after us if Steve’s dead?”
“I don’t know. You’ve known the guy longer than I have. Would he?”
“I’ve seen him, and Tobias has talked about him a lot, but I never sat across a desk from him drinking shots of whiskey. You have.”
Another good point. Jordan was full of good points today.
“Steve’s the boss,” Keo said. “He would move Heaven and Earth to find and snuff out Dave for killing Jack. Without him, the town—and the soldiers running it—might not consider us important enough to commit the manpower. I wouldn’t, in their shoes. What’s two or three more stragglers when they have an entire town to watch over?”
“So there’s a chance no one’s coming.”
“There’s a chance, yeah.”
She cocked her head, scrutinizing him with her one good eye. In a day or two, she would probably be able to see out of the right side just fine.
“What?” he said.
“You’re telling me what you think I want to hear, but you don’t actually believe any of it, do you?”
He shrugged. “Maybe.”
Jordan sighed. “You know what’s ironic about all of this?”
“What’s that?”
“This place.” She looked around at the empty streets and the houses around them again. “We’ve been trying to get here all this time, and here we are, finally. Is it everything you thought it would be?”
“Not quite.”
“Yeah…”
He glanced down at his watch. 5:11 p.m. “It’ll be dark soon. We need to find a place to hole up for the night.”
“And maybe find some food. Did I tell you I was starving?”
“Maybe a time or two.”
“I thought I’d just remind you in case you forgot.” As if on cue, her stomach growled. “See?”
He stood up. “Let’s go get Dave.”
“You think he’s hungry, too?”
“I’m sure he is.”
“Because I’m starving.”
“You don’t say…”
Dave heard them coming behind him and glanced up from the boulder where he was hiding, overlooking the eastern marina on the other side.
“I don’t think they’re coming today,” he said.
“Doesn’t look like it,” Keo nodded.
“That’s good news for us, right? Maybe they won’t come tomorrow, either.”
And maybe monkeys will fly out of my ass, Keo thought, but said, “Maybe. For now, let’s find someplace to bunk down for the night. This island might look empty, but it’s far from it.”
Dave looked up at the sky, and Keo thought he might have shivered involuntarily.
“Been awhile?” Keo asked.
“What’s that?” Dave said.
“Since you’ve been out here.”
Dave tried to smile. “Something like that.”
Keo thought about saying something reassuring. Not just for Dave, but for Jordan standing next to him, but with the night creeping up on them and Steve coming (You’re out there, aren’t you? I know you’re out there.) sooner or later, whatever he said would have just sounded hollow.
“Let’s try to stay alive tonight first, then worry about tomorrow, tomorrow,” was all he could think of to
say.
Choosing a place to stay the night was a no-brainer. The two-story white house on the hill in the middle, where he had found the guns, was the first and last choice he considered. From up there, he could keep an eye on the entire island, including both marinas. The house was also in a perfect spot to, even with just three people, hold off a lengthy assault.
He didn’t like the idea of getting into another standoff with very few outs, but Keo had learned long ago that what he wanted and would rather do was usually not what he had to do in order to survive. Pollard, Song Island, and T18 were proof of that.
“Adapt or perish,” as Lara and the folks on the Trident were fond of saying.
The house was flanked by a half dozen others, with a long, winding driveway that connected it to the streets. A ten-foot-tall metal fence surrounded the property, with an extensive front and backyard, and an electronic gate that they left the way Gene had found it—open. Gene might have just been a sixteen-year-old kid, but he had survived on the island by himself for months; he had done that by not attracting the ghouls’ attention, which meant leaving things as he found them, including the doors, windows, and front gates.
Inside the house, they found five bedrooms, with two on the second floor, including the master. It had an attic but no basement. He found plenty of boxes (open, which probably meant Gene had gone through them already) in one half of the garage, but no car or food. Gene had once told him he had bug-out bags all around the island, but apparently the two-story house wasn’t one of those places. Or if it were, Keo couldn’t find where the kid had hid them.
His stomach was growling when he came out of the garage and headed back to the house. He gave the street beyond the gate a last look, then peeked up at the darkening skies before slipping back inside.
Jordan was leaning against the kitchen’s island counter, looking somberly at her reflection in the steel refrigerator across from her. She and Dave had gone through the cabinets, opening every door they could find in hopes of locating food that hadn’t spoiled or gone bad, while he was outside. By the expression on her face, he guessed they had come up empty, too.