by C A Bird
Humanity Abides
Book Three
The Search For Home
A Post - Apocalyptic Novel
By C. A. Bird
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
Copyright 2014
by Carol A. Bird
All rights reserved
ISBN-13: 978-1500736040
ISBN-10: 150073604X
Cover art Copyright 2014
by David Bird
Special Thanks to:
Christine Temple - Editor
David A. Bird - Illustrator
Lori A. Bird – Contributor
www.carolannbird.com
Acknowledgments
I would like to thank the people who have bought the books in my Humanity Abides Series and who have followed me and my career on Facebook.
Thanks, as well, to my friends and family who have supported me, and given me the time to pursue my dream of writing.
Books by C.A. Bird
Humanity Abides - Book One - Shelter
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Humanity Abides - Book Two - Emergence
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Humanity Abides - Book Three - The Search For Home
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http://www.carolannbird.com
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
Acknowledgements
Books by C.A. Bird
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Epilogue
Other Books
About the Author
1
Deadly radiation swept across the face of the earth, concealed in clouds of dust and fog. Swirling around obstacles and funneling down canyons, it penetrated yielding bodies and tissues, destroying DNA, the very foundation of life. It came down in torrential rains, settling on the land and poisoning plant life, rivers, lakes and oceans. After months had passed following the Great War that had ravaged the planet, the radiation had finally decayed enough to allow healing to begin.
The attack came just before dawn.
Mark was cozy warm, curled around Lori’s back, when the gunfire erupted off to the side of their wagon. He and Lori both came awake with a start, flinging the wool blankets to the side.
“Not again,” she moaned, as they grabbed the guns that were never out of reach and quickly crawled to the rear of the wagon. After the first night out of Eagle Nest, they had learned to sleep in their clothes.
“Ashley and Kevin, keep your heads down and stay in the wagon!” Mark yelled, as he checked the space behind the tailgate and then vaulted over it. Hitting the ground, he rolled under the wagon, hearing Lori grunt as she hit the ground right behind him. They had positioned a board, from the front wheel to the rear wheel, giving them minimal cover. It wouldn’t stop a bullet, but might slow it down a little depending on the caliber. Mark poked his rifle barrel over the board and fired at the muzzle flash off across the plain.
By now there was return fire from the other two wagons.
“Son-of-a-bitch!” The cry came from the wagon to the south of the camp and Mark recognized Willy’s voice, the younger of the Yancey brothers.
“How the hell did they get past the perimeter?” Mark yelled at Lori.
“Beats me. I hope the guys are all right,” she replied, shooting at a shadow as it flitted from bush to bush, moving closer to the circled wagons.
A bullet smashed through the side of the wagon just above Mark’s head and he quickly calculated where it hit in relation to the kids. Getting off three more shots in quick succession he put a small, brass horn to his lips and blew hard, the signal to hold fire so the rear guard could approach the attackers without fear of being hit. Lori crawled to the back of the wagon and Mark felt it shift as she went over the tailgate to check on her children.
More muzzle flashes, like flashbulbs in the distance, and then surprised yells came from the darkness as the attackers found themselves surrounded. The shots ceased suddenly when Einstein’s voice called out, “Throw down your weapons! Get on the ground.” Mark saw a mounted phantom draw a bead on a shadowy figure, and the flash from an AR-15. A grunt came from the shadow, as he threw his weapon to the ground and reached for the sky.
The inhabitants of the camp stayed behind cover until a half-dozen, scrawny men, their hands in the air, were herded into the space between the wagons by three men on horseback. Some of the captives looked angry and some defiant. All were scared.
“That’s all of ‘em, Mark. They were dug in under a big pile of rocks off to the east, just inside the perimeter. We almost camped on top of ‘em,” Jimbo said. He sat astride a horse rather than his usual mount, an old Indian motorcycle.
Mark crawled out from under the wagon, brushing the dirt off his jeans.
They shoved the prisoners to the center of the space and had them sit by the campfire.
“Get on the ground,” Einstein told them. “In a circle. Backs together.” He nodded at Mark and then he and the other two guards turned and rode back into the brush, ghostly figures swallowed by the early morning fog. The sky was beginning to lighten in the east and the chill penetrated the light clothing Mark and the others were wearing. Terry Holcomb, his nineteen year old son Cody, and Sheri Summerland stood guard over the prisoners while the others returned to the wagons to put on warmer clothing.
Mark climbed into the wagon, and immediately noticed the hole in the side was only a few feet from where the children had hidden. His anger flared and he resolved they would find a way to make the wagons more impenetrable.
“Are they gone Daddy?” Ashley asked Mark. “Can we get up now?”
Mark smiled, vividly remembering the first time she had called him Daddy. It was after he had awakened in pain from the fight with the mutated creature that had haunted him since the day the Remnant had been forced from the bomb shelter. She had stood beside his bed, tears in her eyes, “Daddy, are you okay?” As terrible as he’d felt, his spirits rose as he realized how badly he wanted Lori’s children to accept him as their dad.
“We captured them, Ash. They can’t hurt us now.”
Kevin rubbed sleep from his eyes. “Mommy, why do people keep shooting at us? Did we do something wrong?” He slipped his jacket on and pulled a knit cap down around his ears as he crawled from his sleeping bag.
Lori reached over and pulled Kevin into an embrace. At six years old he was having trouble understanding why others kept trying to hurt them.
“They’re just hungry, Kevin. They didn’t get to live in a shelter like we did, and didn’t have supplies to build a nice town like ours.”
The sound of a baby crying and o
f pots and pans banging together got them all moving, as they prepared for another day of travel. Paul “Skillet” Masters had the fire started and the coffee brewing when Mark made his way back over to the prisoners. The sun slid above the horizon and crept into the clouds, backlighting them in fiery colors.
One of the six was no more than a boy, maybe twelve or thirteen. The others were all adults, with two of them appearing to be elderly. They were dressed warmly in hunting coats and gloves. The boy wore a knit cap. Since the nuclear war, even though food had become increasingly hard to find, clothing and other supplies were plentiful, as a result of the small numbers of people who’d survived. Gaunt and pale, their clothes hung loosely, and their faces were filthy. Twigs and brush were stuck in their matted, greasy hair, as though they had been rolling on the ground.
One of the younger men who appeared around thirty, was hunched over as if in pain, and was looking up at Mark with a sideways glance.
“What are you going to do with us?”
“We’re gonna shoot your sorry asses.” Danny Fielder said angrily.
“Shut up, Danny. Mark’s gonna decide what we do.” Jimbo squinted over at Danny with a menacing look.
Mark scratched his chin. “We don’t know yet. We’ll decide after breakfast.”
“Think we could get some of that breakfast?”
“Of course.”
The man looked surprised. “We haven’t eaten for two days. Game’s gettin’ real scarce.”
“Are you hurt?”
“Took one of your bullets across my ribs. It’ll be all right.”
Aaron Brown, a surgical resident before the Great War, came over and ran his fingers inside the man’s coat. Wincing, the man pulled away. “I said it’ll be okay.”
“It’s just a graze. Should heal without treatment.” Aaron accepted two plates from Skillet and headed toward the wagon where his wife Chris and their three month old baby were getting ready for the day’s trip.
Walking out on to the plains, east of the wagons, Mark sipped from his cup of coffee and gazed out toward the sun. It had broken through the clouds and was burning off the remainder of the fog. The land was uneven and there were piles of large rocks where the attackers had hidden until dawn, hoping to catch the occupants of the wagon train off guard as they slept. The aggressors and the people they had attacked were all normal people in very abnormal times and Mark’s group was still learning to defend themselves. They had made mistakes that could get them all killed. Tonight, they would thoroughly search the area inside the perimeter where the sentries patrolled.
Squinting into the sun, he could just see I-25, an empty, straight ribbon of concrete crossing north and south in the far distance, and the smaller Highway 64 much closer to their position. They were paralleling the highway, where the ground was easier going for the mules and horses. The Holcomb family, driving their Jeep, and Sheri Summerland riding on her bicycle, used the highway. Sheri’s bike wasn’t made for off road travel and she had quickly given up trying to stay with the wagons soon after they’d left Cimarron. Jimbo could ride the old motorcycle anywhere, on any surface.
The guards weren’t visible, but Mark knew they were out there surrounding and defending the camp. Since leaving Cimarron they had been attacked twice, the first time just shots out of the dark, and tonight, a full-on assault. Yesterday morning they’d met a man and woman who’d approached peacefully. They were unarmed, and helpless, and had been allowed to join them.
Once again, Mark wondered if they were doing the right thing. Twenty-one months had passed, since the Great War had obliterated civilization in the middle of summer. Over two hundred people had made their way to a bomb shelter in the Sangre De Cristo Mountains of New Mexico, alerted about the coming war by handheld devices that notified them to immediately leave for the shelter… that attack by China was imminent.
For eight months they’d lived a life of relative ease, while those outside the shelter had barely survived the bombs, the deadly radiation and their first winter without electricity. Two types of radiation had been released by the bombs; alpha, beta and gamma radiation from the hydrogen bombs, and a previously unknown radiation, caused by “Red Mercury,” a substance the Chinese had placed in neutron bombs. Large cities with important military installations had been destroyed by the hydrogen bombs. Other cities, hit by the neutron bombs, were spared physical damage but all life was completely annihilated. While ionizing radiation from hydrogen bombs can last months and even many years, the neutron radiation only lasted for a few days or weeks, and covered a much smaller area than the thermonuclear bombs. It sterilized the areas affected and left whole cities and regions intact.
It also had an unanticipated effect… it created unimaginable creatures. Certain groups of men, evil men, had been transformed into huge, reptilian monsters. They had grown in stature, and their nails and teeth had lengthened into fangs and claws. Their skin appeared putrefied and they had lost all ability to feel human emotions or to think as reasoning beings. They were driven only by the need to survive.
And one had been driven by revenge.
When the creature had first seen Mark Teller during the last few days in the shelter, it had transferred all its hatred of authority, of human beings in general, to Mark, who represented the privileged class of people that Arby Clarke had always despised. These creatures, and a series of devastating earthquakes, destroyed much of the shelter and drove them out into a protected valley behind the mountain in which the shelter had been constructed.
Right before winter, in a final deciding battle with the creature, and aided by his friends, Mark had prevailed. He still had a slight hearing loss from the report of the gun fired into the face of the creature just inches from his ear.
Will Hargraves, the billionaire defense contractor who had built the shelter, had also provided tools and supplies in an arena-sized, storage building, allowing them to get started on construction of a town and cabins, and to grow crops and learn skills they would need to survive in the new world they now lived in. They were barely prepared before the second winter hit, and without enough cabins, they had doubled up and spent their first winter outside the shelter just trying to stay warm.
Will had died in their final hurried flight to escape the destruction of the shelter, his head crushed by a rock fall. He had been like a father to Mark, and even after a year, Mark still missed him.
Others had joined them. Einstein, as his followers called him, and a small number of the residents of Cimarron, New Mexico, had survived the war by sheltering in basements. Clay Hargraves, Will’s son, who had gone rogue after being banished from the shelter for attempting to rape one of the other residents, enlisted their aid. Along with forty people from Red River, and an equal number from Eagle Nest, they tried to conquer the inhabitants of the little valley. In the ‘Battle of Platte Rock,’ Clay Hargraves and his gang were killed, partly due to Einstein and the Red River folks hanging back and not participating in the fight.
Will’s daughter Chris was a member of this small group that had left the safety of the valley, and the home they had made for themselves, to make this crazy trip to California, trying to find out about the aftermath of the war and who else may have survived. Many of the members of this party had originally come from the West Coast and were anxious to discover if their homeland still existed, and whether they could live there.
Except Matthew. Matthew Pennington was local, from Santa Fe and Albuquerque. He had come along with the group, still trying to discover where he wanted to live and what he wanted to do.
After a breakfast of biscuits and gravy, dehydrated potatoes and coffee, the group began to break camp. The boards that provided cover under the wagons were slipped inside. Carlos and Chang had slept under the chuck wagon, and rolling up their sleeping bags, stowed them inside, while two small dome tents were taken down and packed.
Chang Lee, a Korean engineer and his best friend, Carlos Zamora, a computer programmer, had come from Silico
n Valley. They flew to the shelter together, barely making it to Albuquerque before the airport shut down with the news of the incoming, Chinese missiles. Recently widowed, Chang had to be convinced by Carlos that it was worth the effort to get to the shelter. They pitched in to help Skillet get his equipment ready.
Three teams of horses and mules were harnessed to the wagons. The outlying guards rode into camp for breakfast and were replaced by three others who headed out on foot to allow the horses to rest.
Their wagons were made of wood, the outer rims of the spoked, wooden wheels lined with metal. Covered with water-proof canvas, stretched over iron ribs that fit into metal brackets on the sides, they looked like the Conestoga wagons of the old west. Mark, Lori and the children used one of the wagons, Chris and Aaron another and the third was Skillet’s chuck wagon. All three wagons were crammed full of supplies: grains, dehydrated foods, barrels of water, ammo and other supplies, barely leaving enough room for the occupants to sleep.
When they were ready to move out, most of the group met in front of the prisoners. The men sullenly looked up at their captors, waiting to hear their fate.
Mark stood in front of the man that had addressed him earlier. “You people attacked us, so we can’t let you join. How the hell did you think you could overpower us?”
“We didn’t know there was so many of you. We just wanted to scare you to surrender. You gonna kill us?”
“No. That would make us just like you. See Bob and Eydie over there?” He pointed to a couple on the edge of the crowd. “They joined us yesterday. Came up to us waving a white shirt and asked if they could join. Civilized like. But you would have killed us for our food and possessions. We’d never be able to trust you.”
“We have families living in that cluster of houses you passed yesterday. We’re out of food and gettin’ low on ammo. Not much game around. What did you expect us to do?”