Read DEAD: Confrontation Online
Authors: TW Brown
“You have a choice,” the major hissed. “You accept your r
ole as attendant…or…you fight me.”
The man’s head turned just slightly. The bodies of those who had challenged the major’s leadership were all within arm’s reach. His head slumped in defeat.
“I have plenty of positions to fill,” she raised her head and addressed the crowd once more. “We are going to build a stronghold that will become a sanctuary for survivors. But we will also become a symbol of power and might. That will take discipline. Who is ready to reap the rewards?”
In her mind, she had expected a mighty cheer from the crowd. What she received was a few shouts mixed with some lukewarm applause and about half of the heads in the group nodding. It was a start.
5
A Skeleton in the Geek’s Closet
Darkness had taken on an entirely new meaning in a dead world.
At first, Kevin was not sure that he had indeed opened his eyes. He rested his hand on his nose but could see absolutely nothing. If it weren’t for Valarie’s snoring, he would have had trouble believing that he was in fact awake.
The dreams he’d been having were already fading, but he made
an effort to hold on to at least one image. Seeing his sister’s face—even in a dream—was enough to fill his heart in ways that were frightening. He had spent most of his life trying to distance himself from any real deep emotion. He’d tried to keep a separation between him and his sister when she was born. But that had failed miserably.
And yet, when something as horrible as
the real life zombie apocalypse had happened, the first thing he’d done was revert to his old ways and send his mother and sister away. He had been thinking of the one person who always came first in Kevin’s life…Kevin Dreon. In all likelihood, his selfishness had probably sent them both to their deaths. And even worse, it hadn’t been his final act.
His mind ran the tally sheet. Cary; it made no difference that he’d survived, or that he’d been immune. It had been his pouting and acting like a child that caused the situation. Peter King; he’d taken the only qualified medical person that he was likely to ever encounter for the rest of his life and dragged him out in the snow in search of medication for a girl so that he could ease his own conscience. Darrin; sure, it was unlikely that he would have been able to do anything the night that Shaw and his men came, but why hadn’t he posted a watch. Hell, why hadn’t he been on watch. They’d already seen Shaw and his men when they first came through.
And just recently…Shari. In fact, he suspected that he would never spend another day in his life without her final minutes coming back to him.
“Try not to make it hurt so much”
Those words had become a chant in his head since the moment that she spoke them.
The fact was, if he was being totally honest with himself, he had thought that he was so smart…had all the answers. The truth was that he was making most of it up as they went along. Some of the stuff was common sense
; some was stuff that he’d learned, but seriously…who had expected this absolute fiction could ever really happen?
Moving Valarie’s arm from across his chest, Kevin wriggled his way out from under the blanket and crawled around until he found the exit. He made his way up the gradual slope and out into the night air. It was still very dark outside their little dome, but there was
enough ambient light that he could at least see shadows and dark shapes.
Once he was relatively certain there were no zombies nea
rby, he moved to the edge of the overpass and relieved himself over the railing. With that basic function done, he considered waking Valarie and heading out. The fatigue in his bones sounded a sharp veto. Besides, if he was this tired, no telling how exhausted that poor girl might be. It was obvious that she’d had a rough go of things the past few days.
He crawled back inside the cave and nestled back in beside the girl who had stopped snoring and moved on to mumbling. He seriously doubted that he would be able to sleep. He decided that wouldn’t be so bad. At least then he wouldn’t have to wo
rry about dreams.
He was wrong. Five minutes later, his breathing had slipped to the deep, regular rhythm of somebody who was fast asleep.
***
“You sure that you don’t want to head to the cabin with your mom and sister?” Mike asked as they all stood around their cars at Trashmore Park.
“They’ll be fine.” Kevin waved the question away. “If this thing lasts longer than a few weeks…I’d be very surprised. There has to be a few people in the chain of command that actually see this for what it is. Besides, remember when FEMA put out that preparedness guide to survive a zombie apocalypse? You think they did that for fun?”
“No, they did it to raise awareness for disaster preparedness by using pop culture,” Darrin quipped.
“Right, because the government cares about pop culture,” Kevin shot back.
“You think anybody in Washington actually believed any of that bull?” Darrin challenged. “They did that on the heels of a bunch of hurricanes and tornadoes and other natural disasters to raise awareness. They figured that if even a few people took it serious, it would be that many fewer people that they would have to worry about the next time a major disaster hit. That is it…plain and simple.”
“Like you know everything about how our government works,” Kevin grumbled.
“All I am asking is if you are sure you don’t want to go after your mom and sister?” Mike spoke up, trying to diffuse the te
nsion.
A pair of fighter planes raced by overhead, banked sharp to the right and disappeared behind some distant trees for a few s
econds. There was a flash and a ball of fire rose skyward in their wake as the jets reappeared and raced north, back the way they’d come.
“Are they bombing our own cities?” Cary breathed.
“Looks that way,” Kevin said with almost no emotion. For the briefest of seconds he considered Mike’s offer.
“We need to get out of the city,” Cary said.
“Before they declare martial law,” Kevin added.
***
His eyes opened, but everything was blurry. The realization that he could see told him that the sun had come up at some point. He wiped the tears from his eyes and tried to stuff the guilt brought on by his most recent dream into a box somewhere in his mind where it would hopefully be lost forever.
“I’m hungry,” a voice whispered at his side.
Kevin turned his head to find Valarie all the way under the comforter, her eyes peeking out from the shadows. His stomach gurgled in agreement. When had he eaten last? He tried to remember but couldn’t. That meant it had been a while.
“Well then I guess we will have to go out and look for something.”
“We can’t,” Valarie whispered.
“Why not?”
The hair-raising sound of a baby cry gave him his answer. Not for the first time, Kevin wondered how many deaths that nasty little trick had attributed to early on.
“Okay.” He climbed out from the blanket and was pleasan
tly surprised to discover that it was not too cold. Sure, his breath still formed little puffs, but by comparison to what they’d been experiencing lately, it really was mild. “You stay put and I will go take care of whatever is out there. Then we will go find something to eat. Does that sound okay to you?” he whispered.
A vigorous head nodding caused the comforter to ripple. Valarie disappeared, leaving Kevin to do a quick check of his weapons. Since he wasn’t sure what he would encounter, he cocked and loaded his crossbow. The only bolt that wouldn’t sav
e your life was the one you didn’t fire.
As he reached the mouth of the tunnel, he heard something to the left and the right. That wasn’t good. He would have to act fast. The option was to duck back inside their little snow cave and wait in the hopes that these things—however many there were—moved on soon. However, he did not want to rely on Valarie’s silence. The very last thing that he wanted to do was have to fight
those things inside the cramped space. Or…even worse…if there were several, have the snow cave assaulted from the outside like he’d seen the zombies do to a door or wall. He was confident that he’d built a fairly sturdy structure, but it would collapse if enough pressure was exerted.
Moving just a bit closer, he could now see the shadow of what he thought might only be one zombie to the right. Unfort
unately, he could see nothing to the left. His best bet would be to move fast and come up quick.
Taking a deep breath, Kevin moved to the very mouth of the entrance. Rolling onto his back, he grabbed the sides and shot himself out. He slid a few feet before coming to a stop. Three to the left and only the one to the right.
He sighted on the closest one—a teen boy with a face that used to contain what Kevin had to guess were several piercings, but now he was an absolute mess. His bolt went in under the chin and jutted up from the top of its head. It toppled, knocking the other two over in the process.
Scrambling up, Kevin pulled another bolt free from the holder mounted on the crossbow and stepped close, driving it into the milky eye socket of the lone zombie that
remained on its feet. There was a sick popping sound. He yanked it back and was able to do the same to the other two who were a lot like turtles flipped onto their backs as they struggled in vain to regain their feet.
With that done, he did a full
walk around to ensure that no other surprises were waiting for them. Once he was certain that it was clear, he called Valarie out. It took them another twenty minutes to get moving as the girl came out and promptly announced that she had to go to the bathroom. He had her go back into their cave seeing as how they wouldn’t be using it any more.
Eventually, they were on the road again. Kevin angled them towards the very first lone residence that he spotted sitting all by itself
surrounded by acres and acres of snow-covered land. His hopes that a farming residence might have some good food stored up proved partially correct. There was a pantry where the occupants had obviously canned shelves full of all sorts of things. Sadly, the frigid temperatures had cause all but two of the jars to burst.
Once they were certain that the house was empty, he and Valarie sat down to frozen
pickled okra. Valarie surprised Kevin by not arguing or complaining about the less-than-desirable makings of their meal. He knew from certain times involving his sister that, if she didn’t like or want something, there was no force under the sun that could get her to comply.
They went through the rest of the house and found a few things, but nothing topped a dresser full of clothes. They were a bit musty, but they were considerably cleaner than what either of them was wearing. They managed to scrounge up a few co
mplete changes. And while none of it was a perfect fit, it felt nice to be out of the soggy stuff they had been wearing. It was only a slight concern, but Kevin noticed a severe amount of discoloration in his feet. Frostbite was obviously setting up camp.
Once they had both changed, Kevin brought Valarie up to the top floor of the farmhouse. He stationed her at a window that looked out across the open fields of white towards the highway.
“I want you to keep looking out for anything moving. I don’t want you to yell, though. We need to be very quiet,” he said. She smiled big and nodded in agreement. “I will be downstairs for a bit getting our stuff ready. When I have everything set, we will go. But I will be busy, so I need you to watch for anything at all. Okay?”
“Okay,” Valarie agreed and turned to start her vigil.
Kevin headed downstairs and set out everything they had and everything they had found. He had an axe, his machete, his crossbow, and an old curved blade that was rusty but seemed pretty sturdy. They had three changes of clothes, two North Face sleeping bags that smelled like cat piss but had sub-zero ratings, a collapsible shovel, some Ambien and the few assorted meds for Valarie that had been with Shari, and one box of Minute Rice. (Finding the sleeping bags had convinced him that it was okay to ditch the comforter and blanket.)
Kevin checked the weapons and made sure that everything was clean and in good working order. He was not fortunate enough to find a backpack, but from what he was seeing, wh
oever had lived here had taken the camping gear. They had probably left the sleeping bags because of the stench. They either had newer ones or had some crazy notion that they would easily replace the ones they left behind.
Once he had everything ready, he slipped out the back door and went to the barn. Time and the fact that everything was fr
ozen did a great job in knocking down the stench from the three cows, two goats, and one horse that had died inside the wooden structure. Of all the animals, it was the horse that creeped him out a bit. Its tongue was sticking out of its mouth and its glassy, dead eyes had that look of fear on them that made its face extra frightening.
He went through the building methodically in search
of anything that they might be able to use. It proved to be a bust. What the original residents had not taken, it was likely that looters had done so long ago. When he was done, he headed back inside to fetch Valarie.
When he got to the top floor, he could hear soft murmuring. He peeked into the room that he’d left her in to watch. She was seated on the floor with what looked like a pair of handmade dolls.
“…and we can sing together every day,” she said in a high-pitched voice.
“But do I have to go to forever sleep, or can I just visit?” she said in her own voice.
“You can only be with me sometimes if you don’t go to forever sleep.” Valarie moved the ‘Shari’ doll back and forth to indicate that she was speaking.
“But how do I go to forever sleep?”
Kevin held his breath. He wasn’t sure what he expected. If she gave some sort of complex answer, he was going to freak out. His mind raced through the plethora of books he had read that crossed the typical zombie story with some sort of supernatural flavor stirred in. This was done with varying degrees of success. Some had really been good reads, but others had bordered on silly.