August Burning (Book 3): Last Stand (14 page)

Read August Burning (Book 3): Last Stand Online

Authors: Tyler Lahey

Tags: #Post-Apocalyptic | Dystopian | Infeccted

BOOK: August Burning (Book 3): Last Stand
7.24Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Jaxton fitted shin guards, elbow protectors, and a bulletproof vest on. He dragged heavily padded gloves on his hands and secured magazines to his forearms. As he reached down to grab his helmet from the floor of the locker room, he saw a pair of feet before him.

“Brother.”

Jaxton stood to his full height, so they were looking at each other evenly. Bennett’s shaggy beard and tattered jacket made him resemble a hippy. Then Jaxton saw the pistols at his hips, and the shotgun across his back. He nodded, in approval.

“You’re ready, then?” Jaxton said.

Bennett looked around, to his old friends. They drew in closer. “I wanted to come to you all. Come and say how sorry I am. And I will always be sorry for what I did under the Lieutenant. How I abandoned my friends.”

Troy spat at him from his wheel chair, and wheeled closer. “Tell my soldiers you’re sorry. The ones lying in the woods up there. You should know that. I don’t forgive you.”

Bennett stiffened and quickly bit his lip. “I don’t expect you to. I don’t expect any of you too. But I had to come say it.”

Troy reached up and snatched the Eagle patch from Bennett’s baggy jacket. “Jaxton made a mistake giving this to you.” He wheeled away, deeper into the swarm of survivors.

“Does he speak for all of you?” Bennett asked quietly, afraid to look up from under his eyebrows.

Duke and Wilder looked to Jaxton and Adira. “He is not ours to forgive,” Wilder said quietly. “It was wrong to fight for the Lieutenant in winter, but I saw him fight today. He fought for me, and for Adira.”

“I have hated you, Bennett. For good reason, I think. But Wilder speaks the truth. You were there for us when we needed you. And you are here now, ready to fight with us,” Adira said.

Bennett stiffened with hope, trying not to smile. All eyes turned to Jaxton, who regarded his old friend keenly.

“I never forget a betrayal. But I can’t forget a friend either. For what it’s worth, I’ll fight with you here, today. On this last day.”

Bennett stuck out his hand eagerly. Jaxton considered it, and then in a rush clasped it with his own.

 


 

 

He was sad. He could feel the tears building. Jaxton couldn’t help it, as he stared at the once proud back of a broken man.

Troy’s jacket hung loosely on his famished frame, and his hands gripped the sides of the wheelchair; Jaxton could see his friend’s pain, even from a distance. The solitary figure sat in the middle of the basketball court, under a rusty ceiling fifty feet above. The light from his torch flickered and danced around the massive space.

Troy turned as Jaxton’s heavy boots thudded on the gymnasium’s dusty wooden floor. They were alone in the darkness, save for the lone torch.

“I’d be dying even if the infected weren’t outside,” Troy murmured, his blustery alpha male routine long since gone.

Jaxton crouched. Troy had once been handsome, with fierce eyes, a thick square jaw and bright teeth. The man who stared back at him now was a stranger, a feverish apparition from a camp of the dying. His mottled flesh was shimmering with sweat.

“Show me the leg.”

Troy grunted, and handed Jaxton the torch. Pulling up his filthy camouflage, he revealed a massive, swollen knee. The skin was red and white, a mass of engorged flesh. Jaxton winced.

“Annabelle couldn’t set it.”

Jaxton’s mind swirled, wishing he had thought of something to say to one of his oldest friends. “You’ve always done more than anyone could have expected of you.”

Troy snorted.

“I’m no good at these sort of things.”

“It was all going to end some day. I’m ready to die, Jax.”

Jaxton withdrew, shocked from actually hearing the words. But he knew it had to be said.

Troy continued, to Jaxton’s surprise. “I’ve been with some great girls, I’ve been infatuated a few times, and I think I was even in love once. I’ve had brothers that would die for me, and I for them. I think I’ve experienced it all, or, at least a little but of everything.”

Jaxton placed his hand on his friend’s arm. “You are content then?”

Troy smiled for the first time in days. “Some guys sit in their basements all their lives, playing in virtual worlds, living through other people’s experiences on the internet. Some boys die in the Army at 17, before having known a girl, before having struggled and triumphed. I pity those men. I have nothing but to be thankful.”

Jaxton grinned wistfully.

“I like to think we’ve experienced the spectrum.”

“Spectrum? Is this another lofty idea from our dreamer?”

“We’re all dreamers of sorts.”

“Enough. What say you?”

Jaxton sat on the gymnasium floor, so he had to look up at Troy’s bedraggled face. It was a soft face, finally. “The spectrum of emotions. You wouldn’t want to live a life experiencing just happiness would you? Even a single emotion, even if it’s positive. A full life demands the spectrum. You can’t know true highs till you slog through the mud.”

“Tell me of it, Jaxton.”

Jaxton watched the shadows drawing closer to them in the darkness, and adjusted the oil soaked rag atop the torch. “I’ve known ecstasy. With other girls before, but mainly with Adira. Physical, of course. Exposing that great mystery that lingered so long when we were in high school. Discovering how wonderful it all really was. And then something more. Something more sublime.”

“I lost you at the end. Maybe I have missed something. Can I go back in time, and escape the valley when I had the chance?” Troy leaned in, like a crusty rogue.

His compatriot grinned and slapped him on the shoulder. “If only my friend.”

Troy refocused his gaze, the sweat still pouring down his forehead, and he winced.

“Does it hurt Troy?”

Troy shook his head firmly, and nodded.

Jaxton continued, “I’ve been horrified. Truly, horrified. As we all have. Where my very being revolts at the sight before me. I could feel my brain scrambling to get out of my body.

I’ve known shame, and disgust. When I saw Liam try to save himself the other day, never had I known such revulsion. You already know. A lifetime of memories crushed with a single moment of cowardice.

I’ve known anger. The kind that makes you a god. You are invincible. When I saw Adira lying in that study room, and Terrence dead at her feet. When I realized what he tried to do to her.”

Troy tapped him on the shoulder, weakly. “You’re forgetting grief.”

Jaxton drew up to his feet. “When I saw you sitting here, alone in the middle of this dark room, destined to die, I knew grief.”

Troy looked away, his jaw tense. “Don’t waste any tears on me. We’re all going to die.”

Jaxton nodded softly. “Oh, I know. But it made me think of it all. About all we were going to be, young, clean, and strong. And I remember you as the same. And now I see you, sick, weak, frail.”

Troy’s eyes were watering, but he refused to lock eyes. “I was different before, huh.”

“I am sorry.”

Troy sniffled and wiped a miserable streak of snot on his jacket. “Don’t be. Not everything has gotten worse. I like silence these days. I used to hate it. Do you remember? There was nothing scarier then closing your eyes alone at night and being there, with just your thoughts to keep you company.”

Jaxton smiled knowingly. “I remember silences, before the Outbreak. Existential dread. What am I doing? What is anyone even doing here? Does it matter at all?”

“Now it’s different. That’s why I like to be here, alone.”

“Why is it different?” Jaxton asked, watching the torch flickering to a tiny ember.

“Because there’s only one goal.”

“What’s that?”

Troy’s old fire flickered in his eyes. “Survive.”

The pair stood in the darkness, listening to the inescapable moaning of the foe outside their walls.

 


 

 

Jaxton walked alone, passing the rusty old lockers. 637. He stopped before the number, and ran his fingers over it. Memory stirred within him, and he found himself chuckling aloud.

“What could you find funny, at the end of all things?”

Jaxton looked up, and saw Joseph walking slowly towards him, his own torch held aloft. “Joseph. It’s good to see you. This was my locker, I think, when I was 14. A freshman.”

“The little man grew up here?”

Jaxton corrected him. “No more than a boy.”

“But you left a man, right? 18?” Joseph stopped and leaned on the lockers beside him.

“Still a boy. Age doesn’t make a man.”

“True. What does?”

Jaxton let his fingers fall from the locker. “Struggle.”

“So we’re all men here, now, then.”

Jaxton turned to face the soft eyed man beside him, and saw the torches dancing on his glasses. “We were men before the winter turned.”

Joseph nodded, and stood in silence.

Jaxton pressed him. “What are you thinking about?”

“At the front of my mind, I’m of course wondering how long those barricades at the front doors will hold. But deeper, I’m hoping I did enough.”

“Enough? What, enough good to go to heaven?”

“Whatever there is beyond, and however I am judged. I hope I did enough.”

“It’s funny,” Jaxton started, “the obsession with doing selfless acts for a selfish cause.”

“What do you mean?”

“If the only motivation to do good deeds is to be rewarded after you die, are you really doing good deeds?”

“Well, it’s not to say I wouldn’t try to be a good man if I knew there was nothing after.”

“But you’re not sure.”

Joseph conceded. “I’m not sure. Why do you do good things?”

Jaxton chuckled, “I don’t, really.”

“Oh, but I think you do. I’ve seen you working hard, far harder than other men, to make sure there is protection…food…for everyone here. Even if someone is weak or sick, you see it as society’s duty to help them. Others respect only the right of the strong.”

“Joseph, I was thinking about something.”

“Tell me.”

Jaxton licked his lips, and felt existential anxiety coursing through him. “I had a thought, last night with Troy. I imagined Liam out there, infected along our walls. All our friends.  They’re still alive.”

Joseph shrugged warily, but his eyes were interested. “Well, in a way. They’re like animals.”

“They are. But you believe in a soul right? A spirit? What if it’s still in all those people? What if their bodies aren’t just mindless vessels for some host? I want to believe there’s something after this. I have to. What if our infected friends are being held back by the infection? Being held back from moving on?”

“I’ve always imagined they die after they become infected. But….”

Jaxton continued, his mind bubbling out of his mouth, “We’ve seen there are variations of the disease, ways of natural immunity. The beta-infected. They retained some of their personalities, their individuality. I can’t shake the fear. I can’t die thinking my friends are maybe still human, at least in part. What if Liam is out there right now, a fraction of his mind existing at the back of his brain, kept in check by the infection? Could a part of his old self be conscious to it all?”

Joseph kneaded his face, etched with a year of deep worry. “I am afraid now, too. I think it’s something I perhaps always feared, but never admitted.”

Jaxton clutched the smaller man, and pressed his bloodshot eyes close. “How can we save them all?”

Joseph shook his head. “Save them? What do you mean?”

Jaxton pressed him further. “How can we kill all the infected? How can we kill most of them? How can we make sure that those who are bitten tomorrow don’t live for years as the infected?”

Joseph turned and paced in the hall, his brow furrowed.

He held up a finger. “I have an idea,” he said quietly.

“Yes? Yes?!”

“Is there any more gas left?”

Jaxton hesitated.”Yes. More than a few barrels actually. But all the vehicles are gone, or destroyed.”

Joseph shook his head. “I know. We need it for something else. There’s a generator in the boiler room as well, isn’t there?”

“A big one. It could heat half the school back in the day. What are you thinking, Joseph?”

“Get half the gas in the boiler. Use the rest to power the generator and turn on the circulating pumps, and circulate the gas throughout the school in the pipes and radiators. When this is all over, blow it from the roof pipes. Even if there’s not enough gas to circulate half the school, the whole place will go up in flames.”

Jaxton looked up from Joseph, and set his jaw. “Come with me.”

 


 

“I just don’t get it. There’s no way out? Isn’t there a place we can make a push?”

“Duke. We’ve checked the walls a dozen times. Have you been on the roof? The infected are swarming in a mass ten feet thick at the base of the entire length of wall. There are infected swarming through the outbuildings and woods, obsessed with our scents. There are thousands of them.”

Other books

A Luring Murder by Stacy Verdick Case
The Journey's End by Kelly Lucille
The Angel and the Outlaw by Madeline Baker
Influence: Science and Practice by Robert B. Cialdini
The Beard by Sinclair, Mark
His Brand of Passion by Kate Hewitt
Love's Baggage by T. A. Chase