Read Children of the After: Awakening (book 1) Online
Authors: Jeremy Laszlo
“Yeah, people that wanted to drag you off and do God knows
what to you,” Sam interrupted.
“Yes, they obviously weren’t what we had hoped for. But if
other people are alive, that means that out there somewhere are
good
people, and a
good
place for us to live with Will.”
“I’m not arguing that, Jack. I’m just saying. We have it
pretty good right now. Why leave that, when we don’t know where to even go? Why
not stay and see if we can figure out what happened?”
“Find out how?” This time it was Jack to interrupt.
“Grandma’s house. Neighbor’s houses. There has to be
something. I don’t know. The whole world can’t just blow up without some
evidence as to why.”
Will wanted to tell them that he wanted to stay, but he
couldn’t tell them anything they didn’t already know. He didn’t like their
tones. He didn’t like that they didn’t agree, but he kept quiet, listening to
see where the conversation was going. There was a few moments of silence as a
whole range of emotions played across Jack’s face, but finally, with a deep
sigh, he turned his eyes back to Sam and nodded.
“OK, Sam. You’re right. We can stay. At least for a little
while. By day we’ll go out and see what we can scavenge and what we can learn,
and by night we’ll stay right here, but we
are
leaving. We have to leave
while there are enough supplies for us to leave with and get us away from here.
We can’t wait until we run out again.”
“OK, Jack,” Sam said.
Watching as Sam stood up, Will saw her cross the few feet
separating her from his big brother and she hugged him.
“I think that this is best. Let’s get some sleep tonight,
and tomorrow we can see what we can find out about what happened,” Sam half
whispered.
They were staying. Good.
The morning had gone better than any over the last few days,
and Jack was thankful for it. Waking up, they had all eaten their fill of
whatever enticed them, knowing that the day would likely be long and laborious.
Once finished, they emerged from the cellar, closing the doors behind them, and
approached the ruined remains of Grandma and Grandpa’s house.
Though the building was more or less destroyed, the front
porch and part of the front wall of the house remained, and this is where Jack
knew they would find some clues to what had happened, if any existed here. The
rest of the house had burned, and anything that had any answers had likely
burned with it.
Leading his siblings up to the storm door upon the home’s
front porch, Jack pried it open, swinging the door wide, its bottom edge
dragging the surface of the top step. The whole room had shifted, he supposed,
and as he let go of the door it remained open. Cautiously stepping inside the small
room, he looked around, seeing what it was and recalling what it had been the
last time he had visited.
Both ends of the small porch held a rocking chair that his
parents had bought his grandparents at the Amish flea market in Shipshewana. Though
their color had changed, probably due to the heat of the fire, they looked
rather well preserved. Indoor outdoor carpet stretched across the small space,
the far end having shriveled and darkened to a sickly shade of blackish green. Here
and there shards of glass littered the floor, but to Jack, all of this was
unimportant. What he had hoped he would find, he did find, and here, in the
small enclosed porch, were a collection of newspapers in various states of
ruin. Most were all but destroyed by the rain that had come through the windows
over months and the sun beating down on them, looking like little more than
giant spitballs, but others were better preserved.
Looking under the rocking chair to his left, he saw a rolled
paper, that although faded, looked dry and protected beneath the chair’s seat. Next
to the chair’s rocker, another paper laid, still inside the plastic bag it had
been delivered in. Leaving the doorway he approached the two papers that
appeared in the best shape, allowing both Sam and Will to enter behind him.
Picking up the newspaper that remained in its plastic, he
slid it from the semi-transparent sleeve into his lap. Removing the rubber band
that secured it in a roll, he unwound the paper, scanning the top of the front
page. The headlines were useless, one article dealing with problems in the Senate,
and another about asteroids passing near to earth. Moving on, he scanned
further across the page in search of the date. No good. It was printed months
before they had been locked in the vault by Dad. Ugh.
Discarding the first newspaper, he looked across the small
room to Sam and Will who both carefully worked through papers in far worse
shape than those he had chosen. Refocusing himself, he took a deep breath and
lifted the other paper, the one that had been under the chair. Unrolling it
upon his lap, he found that it was not a whole paper as he had presumed, but just
the first few pages of a paper loosely rolled, making it appear bigger than it
actually was. Opening it and spreading it across his lap, he found that its
condition was much worse than he had hoped as well. Though some of the ink
remained, the majority of the page had been a photo that now was too ruined to
make out. The text of the articles had all smeared together, proof that although
under the chair, water had saturated it on multiple occasions. None of that was
what caught his attention though.
With all the small print gone and the large image destroyed,
the paper would provide him almost nothing, except for the headline that
stretched all the way across the top of the page. It was smeared, and the ink
had run, but the print was so large he could still easily distinguish the
letters, and a knot formed in his stomach.
IS THIS AN INVASION?
Over and over he scanned the words, looking all about the
page for anything else he could read but nothing else was legible. Flipping the
page over and scanning through the next page, the result was the same. All but
the main headline on the first page had been washed away. Lost. The answers
might have been there months, or maybe even just a few short weeks ago, but
they were gone now. Frustrated, he looked up and Sam was staring at him
intently, one eyebrow slightly higher than the other, a questioning look upon
her face. Turning the paper over, he held it up for her to read for herself as
her expression fell, a deep frown taking its place.
* * * * *
An invasion? Sam couldn’t believe it. Who would have invaded
the United States? Sure, they had no shortage of enemies, she supposed, but
none that would dare invade. Nuke maybe, but invade… No way. Unless they nuked
first, and then invaded. That would explain a lot, like why the city was
destroyed, or why the monkey thing didn’t have hair. A nuclear bomb could
destroy a city, and the radiation could make an animal’s hair fall out. Things
were starting to make sense, but not all of it. Where were the people? Or at
least their bodies? Who had invaded? Why?
Looking up to Jack, she knew he didn’t have the answers. He
himself was scouring through the remains of other newspapers upon the floor,
hoping to glean something else useful. Returning to her work, Sam carefully
began separating the pages of the paper between her knees upon the floor. The
first several layers of pages had been ruined and were too wet to work with,
but peeling them away, the lower layers still held nearly perfect text. The
problem was not the legibility, but the fact that the pages were damp. Moving
them, she had to be extremely careful not to tear them to shreds as she pulled
the pages apart.
Looking over to her smaller sibling, she found he was doing
almost precisely the same procedure as she, and within minutes so too was Jack.
Together, all three of them began separating pages, spreading them about to
dry, as they worked hour after long hour through the tedium together. Though
she didn’t make an actual effort to read any of the pages as she worked, it was
impossible to ignore the words that stood out among them, especially headlines.
One said
Judgment day has arrived
, and another asked the question,
Is
this the end
? There was a smattering of pages that appeared irrelevant or
unrelated, but Sam did not bother trying to distinguish any page’s importance,
deciding instead to just keep working and read what she could when the pages
dried.
It was evening when they called it quits, collecting the
pages that had dried through the day in an effort to bring them to the cellar
with them. In stiff, crumpled piles the various pages were gathered up, and Sam
followed both of her siblings back to the cellar. The day had been long and
primarily quiet, each of them concentrating on the task at hand, but even so,
they spoke enough to decide they would eat before settling in to see what they
could learn.
With all of them anxious, however, their meal was short-lived,
and before long they were back to the disfigured pages, searching the contents
for any answers they could find.
* * * * *
When Will had entered the vault months and months ago he
remembered that he had not been the best reader. At school he received extra
tutoring, and was making progress, but then the event happened. Months inside a
steel box could really change a person, and with nothing much to do inside the
vault, Jack and Sam had both read with him, and helped him to sound out hard
words, and before they finally opened the door, he could read anything in the
vault, and had, multiple times.
Sure he preferred his comic books, or even a couple of the
story books that were written for an audience Sam’s age, but in this task, Will
was excited that not only could he help his brother and sister, but he could
read just as good as either of them. This in mind, when his siblings took up
their first pages, he too slid one off the top of their pile and began working
through its contents. It wasn’t long before he discovered something
interesting.
Continued from page 1A:
…are undermined by their technological capabilities. With
their infrastructure destroyed in every major city, analysts and military
advisors say it is time for Europe to throw in the towel and run. At the same
time, rumor spreads that Canadian forces, although sustaining heavy losses,
have found a way to disrupt the enemy’s stealth technology. Could this mean the
battle is turning? It has been less than six hours since the attack commenced,
and all sources say that this massive strike is likely to spill over onto
American soil within hours, not days. We can only pray that our military is up
to the task. -- Written by Chief Editor, Mckenzie Rayne
Finishing the article, Will didn’t know what to say to Jack
or Sam, and without words of his own did the only thing he could think of. He
began the article again, this time reading it out loud for his siblings to
hear. Glancing up between the sentences he read, he looked over the page to two
pairs of transfixed eyes, their expressions frozen, and mouths open in
disbelief. After finishing the passage once more, the cellar fell silent for
what seemed an eternity as everyone processed the information.
“Europe, Canada, and the United States? Stealth technology? Who
could it have been? The Chinese? But why?” Jack asked no one in particular,
continuing on without awaiting a response. “They have been working on stealth for
years. They made aircraft, drones, and who knows what else. What if they made
stealth long range nukes? They certainly have the manpower. Even the direction
makes sense. First Europe and then over the pond to Canada, and then here. It’s
like no one saw it coming.”
“Like a blitzkrieg?” Sam asked, referencing the German’s
rapid assaults in World War Two.
Will just listened, not knowing anything about most of what
they were talking about. He tried to put the pieces together like Sam and Jack
had, but it didn’t make sense to him. He didn’t know stuff about China or
Canada. All he did know is that he was scared. Europe was attacked first, and Mom
was in Europe. Maybe that’s why Dad had to leave them in the vault. Will wished
Dad was here now.
Rising to his feet, he crossed the small room with tears
running down his cheeks, aiming towards the outstretched arms belonging to Sam,
thinking in that moment that nothing could get any worse. But he was wrong. Way
wrong.
Hearing the words that Will had read made Jack feel dizzy,
but it seemed to have a deeper effect on the smaller boy, who stood with tears
streaming down his face. Watching as Will was collected into Sam’s arms, Jack
thought to speak again but decided against it. He and Sam could talk about it
after Will was asleep. Turning to help calm and comfort Will, Jack was caught
completely off guard when the door to the cellar was ripped open from above, as
a cold wind swept through the small room and the darkness of night stared back
at him from above with eyes of steely grey.
Like his nightmare the day before, the bearded rider strode
out of the darkness with blood in his beard and a tree branch under one arm as
a crutch. Though he limped heavily, he carried a shotgun under the other arm
that was more than enough warning for Jack to stay still. The man was covered
in red brown mud, his duster seemingly having changed colors from black to this
new hue, and in the man’s face was a strange look that bordered on disbelief,
fear, and anger. Jack did not doubt the severity of the situation.
“You kids are hard to track,” the man said in a deep and
sinister tone. “I wouldn’t have found you if it wasn’t for this,” he added,
holding up an empty red Skittles wrapper.
Jack cursed their luck as his eyes darted around the room
looking for some way to get Sam and Will out, his eyes falling on the shovels
and rakes hung neatly on the wall.
“Now now, boy. Let’s not go there again,” the man added, his
expression grave before being overcome by a fit of coughs.
Watching the man’s shotgun bounce with his coughs, Jack slid
across the floor, placing himself between the man and his siblings. If he was
going to hurt
them
, he’d have to get though
him
first. The
coughing lasted a few minutes, ending with fresh specks of blood in the man’s
beard, but he remained blocking their only exit.
“I probably would have missed you again, had it not been for
your light there,” he said, pointing to Will’s police light. “Still, you kids
did good. It’s no wonder you made it this long all alone. You’re resourceful,
intelligent, and fast on your feet. You’re gonna have to be to keep ahead of
them.”
Again the man was wracked by coughing. Jack’s eyes returned
to the wall of tools. If he moved quickly he could get a shovel and hit the man
before he knew it was coming. If he wasn’t fast enough, it would be another
story altogether, and Sam and Will would be all alone. That thought stilled
him, causing him to look again to the rider who had been chasing them for days.
The coughing stopped.
“I realize I may have had the wrong approach the first time
I saw you three in Chicago. I wasn’t tryin’ to hurt ya, though. I was trying to
keep you away from
them
,” the man stated.
Jack tried to make sense of the man’s words. Who did he mean
by
them
? The Chinese? He wanted to ask, but the man beat him to it,
obviously seeing the confusion on his face.
“They have scouts everywhere, finding those of us who are
left and picking us off. They have a big force coming this way, that’s why me
and Charlie were leaving the city. We were trying to scrounge up some supplies
when I spotted you three. If I hadn’t seen you, and been sent halfway across
the city being dragged by my horse, I probably wouldn’t have made it. When I
got back, looking for Charlie, he had been taken. They got him.”
The man kept talking but wasn’t saying much and Jack was
getting frustrated. He had put together that Charlie had been the man driving
the wagon, but who had got him? Who were
they
? He almost asked, but then
the man started talking again.
“They’ll be here in a couple days, their scouts are already
in the area. Got me one this morning,” the man bragged. “You kids can’t stay
here or they’ll find you. Keep going south, head towards St. Louis, I heard
once that resistance fighters have a base there. You kids shouldn’t be alone.
I’ll take ya as far as I can, but I ain’t gonna make it too far,” the man said,
bobbing his head towards his leg. “Ya’ll did good with that trap back there,
but I busted my leg. Had to put down my horse too. I’m sorry if I scared ya,
but it had been a long time since I saw any kids, and I just panicked. I didn’t
want you kids getting caught.”
“Wait. What?” Sam asked from behind Jack.
“Yeah, what are you talking about?” Jack asked.
“Whudaya mean, what am I talkin’ about?”
“Who are they? And what happened to everything?” Jack
demanded to the rider, whose face paled dramatically as his mouth fell slack.
“You mean to tell me that ya’ll don’t know what’s going on?
Holy cow. Where have ya’ll been? Under a rock?”
“In a security bunker.” This time it was Will who spoke up.
“Oh man,” the rider explained. “You kids… Wow,” he said,
shaking his head. “Look, I can explain it all on the road, OK? I usually don’t
advise traveling at night, that’s when they’re moving around, but you can’t
stay here.”
Jack didn’t know what to think. Was it the truth? Could he
be a friend? Ally? Was he trying to trick them into leaving to keep all the
food for himself? But he said he would come with them… Could they trust him? He
had no way to know. He needed more answers.
“Listen,
stranger
,” Jack said, accentuating the word.
“I don’t know who you are, or why you have been following us for days, but
unless you have some more specific answers, I would prefer you just be on your
way.”
“Kid, seriously, there isn’t time. All you need to know is
that I am not going to hurt you. I am trying to help. They are coming this way,
and I can’t protect you from them. If we had more time we could probably find a
way to secure this door and hide from them, but there isn’t time. We have to
run, and we have to do it now.”
Jack was beyond aggravated. The man wasn’t telling them
anything. Not anything of use. Rising to his feet, Jack reached over to the
wall and pulled a shovel down from it, showing the man his seriousness. He
wouldn’t wait for the man’s explanations any more, and in that very instant, he
realized he wouldn’t have to.
* * * * *
Sam watched and listened to the exchange primarily between
her brother and the rider, and felt uneasy beyond belief. She didn’t know how,
but she knew what the man was saying was true. They
were
in danger. They
did
need to leave. Regardless of the argument she had given Jack the
previous day, now she wanted to leave.
Right now
. But it was too late.
Out of the darkness behind the rider, something leapt upon
his back, driving him forward as he tumbled down the stairs with a startled
yell. The shotgun discharged, making her ears ring as smoke filled the small
space, making everything look surreal. Looking across the floor she clutched
Will to her, rolling to cover him as much as she was able with her own body.
When the rider settled at the bottom of the stairs, the
thing was on top of him striking and beating him about the chest and face; the
rider, barely able to defend himself from the barrage of blows, raised his
hands trying to defend himself. The thing atop the rider was odd, and yet
familiar. She had seen one just a few nights before, fleeing the shadows
beneath the overpass.
Looking like a cross between an ape and a man, the skin-toned
creature pummeled the rider relentlessly, seemingly bent on the rider’s
destruction. But it appeared to Sam that Jack had different plans.
Out of the smoke Sam’s brother appeared, wielding the shovel
he had claimed from the wall of tools. Swinging it once, he struck the creature
as the metal head of the shovel rang like a tuning fork. As if in slow motion,
the creature slumped to the ground beside the rider, who used his arms to scoot
back and raise himself up against the stairs. Looking at the odd angle of the
rider’s leg, it was apparent that he wouldn’t be going anywhere without help. Even
a crutch would be of little use now. Rising cautiously as the rider began
coughing violently, Sam pulled Will up with her and joined Jack in inspecting
the odd attacker. It was almost like a man, but wasn’t. Instead of four fingers
and a thumb on each hand, it had three. Instead of a pointy human nose, it was
longer and flat, like some species of ape. It had larger, more bulbous eyes and
a wider jaw, but that was all Sam was able to note, as their inspection was cut
short.
“Listen, kids. You grab what you can and go now. They would
have heard that gunshot and they will be coming. Go south. “
“What about you?” Sam asked.
“I’ll try and keep them busy a while. Give you a head start.
You three just get some supplies and go. Keep moving all through tomorrow. They
hide during the day, they don’t like the sun. They have some kind of thermal
vision or something. Can’t see you if you’re inside an insulated space, or
behind certain kinds of glass. That’s why they break it all. They’re strong and
fast, but don’t seem too smart. Just keep moving and hide good. Go south and
find help.”
That seemed like enough information for all of them, and Sam
sought her pack, noticing as Jack handed his shovel to the rider. It was going
to be a long night.
* * * * *
With more mixed emotions in his head than he could ever
recall, Will rushed about the small confines of the cellar collecting jars of
food and dropping them into his bag. The world had been ruined by monsters.
Monsters! Neither Jack nor Sam had even considered it when he had suggested it
months ago and in several conversations since, but he had been right. Pausing
momentarily, he looked back over his shoulder at the thing on the ground. It
was still breathing. He could see its chest moving. He put his pack on his back
and picked up his police light.
Within seconds, they were headed towards the stairs and the
door above it, but Will couldn’t just leave. Turning, he was nearly bowled over
by Sam following behind him, but he didn’t even flinch. Looking to the rider,
who was not only injured but obviously exhausted, he placed his hand on the
man’s shoulder in the darkness.
“Thank you,” Will whispered to the stranger.
“You’re welcome, son. Now you kids get going.”
Without another word, Will turned and ran up the stairs,
grabbing Jack’s waiting hand as Sam took his other arm from behind. Into the
night they ran, a strange whooping sound calling to them from the forest behind
from dozens of locations. Moving as fast as they dared in the dark, it was all
Will could do to keep focused on running, his mind seeking to go over all they
had heard. Distracted, it was maybe a half an hour later when two shots split
the night time air, echoing off the trees all around them. Will knew two
things. He would never see the rider again, and there was still much more to
learn about what had happened in the world around them.
-End