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Mark Clodi (36 page)

BOOK: Mark Clodi
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“Where is Veronica and Erin?” his voice took on an accusing tone, “You didn’t bring her back did you? I don’t want a little girl zombie!”

“Whoa! Whoa! No way, she ain’t a zombie, we only bled her enough to heal ourselves up a bit, we didn’t even finish the job, Veronica is going to give her to Max. Let him deal with the kid. Where’d you find the gun?” asked Jimbo, amazed.

“I picked it up in Max’s back yard and I found this.” Bobby held up an unspent shell.

“Well I’ll be damned! Good job Bobby!” shaking his head in disbelief, “We can’t find any guns and you find one laying in the yard. Un-fucking-believable.”

Bobby beamed over the praise and together they waited for Veronica to return. It was a short wait.

“I left her in the Cadillac. She’ll live. There is a gas station down the street with a car out front, like they were filling up. Lets go see if we can find the keys.”

The keys were on the body of a man lying in front of the counter, he was missing his head. The car was already full of fuel and soon enough they were headed north towards Boulder, leaving Arvada behind.

 

Chapter 52

A few hours had passed. Cory had woken up and was busy playing video games with Nick. Max normally would not have allowed Nick anywhere near a video game, but playing outside was simply too dangerous, with headphones on the boys were quiet as church mice. When Max had suggested moving one or both cars into the garage, Stewart had said to move the cruiser in. When she went out to move it she found a girl in the front seat, a very scared, bloody girl. The girl wouldn't talk to her, but Amelia had coaxed her name, Erin, out of her using food as a bribe. Erin's arm had been cut open in a ragged manner and she would not say what had happened to her. Amelia cleaned her up and put her with the other children, who were confined to the second story of the house.

After moving the cruiser in Tom and Stewart looked it over as best they could. Neither of them were mechanics, so they went slow and looked for obvious damage. After ten minutes of looking and not finding any problems they came to the conclusion that the cruiser had come through in remarkable shape. They pulled it out and drove the Cadillac into the garage to check it over, it was completely unscratched and ready to roll.

With all the other adults busy Max and Sarah were left to talk. At first they just held each other, then Sarah started crying. Over breakfast she had spoken with Amelia and learned what had happened to Diane. By noon Sarah no longer felt good, she described it as having a case of the flu. Her stomach felt like it was being tied in knots. When she and Max checked her wound in their master bedroom it was red, swollen and filled with a foul smelling green and yellow pus. They both cried then as they cleaned it up as much as possible. At dinner time Sarah did not help out with preparing the food, a thick sheen of sweat covered her face and plastered her hair to her head. She didn't eat dinner. As night came on the group took heavy winter blankets and sleeping bags out of the closets and garage and hung them over all of the upstairs windows, to keep light from getting out and giving away their location.

Sarah went into her bedroom and called Max and their kids in and shut the door.

Amelia spoke quietly with Stewart and Tom downstairs. “She looks like Diane did, before she turned.”

“So she isn't going to make it? How much longer did Diane last after she got to this point?” asked Stewart.

“About half the night, maybe six hours.”

“Shit, what are we going to do? We can't kill Max's wife!” said Tom.

“I don't know, I don't know. We'll think of something.” replied Stewart.

They went on to discuss piling furniture on the stairway and hiding out up there for the night, looking around they didn't have much left to move, most of the furniture in the living room had been moved in front of the door or pulled into the kitchen to barricade the patio doorway.

Inside Max's bedroom Sarah told the kids how much she loved them and would always love them, then had Max bring them to Nick's room. Max went back into his bedroom alone and shut and locked the door behind him.

“You have to Max. I won't become one of them.” Sarah pleaded.

“Don't ask me to do that, you can't and I won't. What if someone comes up with a way to reverse it? Then you would be gone forever.”

“Max I am going to be gone forever. I can feel it, it hurts. It hurts so bad. Just do it, please?”

“I can't.”

“Stewart then, send her to do it. I don't want to run around like one of them, I can't do that, killing and...and eating other people. Becoming one of them! They were evil! That won't be me.”

“No, no one is going to do anything...final. We will figure something out.”

“Max this isn't a mountain you can climb, this isn't a game you can win by putting more effort into it. This is it. I got bit. I got infected and I am going to die. Tonight. You cannot sit there and say you are going to figure something out.”

Max bowed his head into his hands and sobbed. Sarah continued, “You have to do it. I want you to do it.”

Max raised his tear stained face and looked at her. Giving her a curt nod.

“Good, should we go into the back yard, away from the kids?”

Horrified Max said, “I'm not doing it now! You are still alive!”

She smiled at him, “Better now before...I turn. At least we could get away from the kids and they wouldn't have to see. If you wait until I change we could be out there all night, plus if I stay here it would be a mess to clean up.”

Max just stared at her, then with some anger in his voice he said, “You are going to die and you are worried about the mess it would make in our bedroom?”

Sarah shrugged, “I am being realistic. If you wait until I change you would have to shoot me here, then drag me out past the other bedrooms, maybe the kids would see, maybe not. Then you would have to deal with the blood and stuff. It is better to just go do it now and get it over with, before the pain gets worse.”

“No, I think I can do it after you turn, but no way, no way can you ask me to do this before that happens. I would always think maybe we were too soon, maybe you would fight it off, maybe you wouldn't turn out like the others.”

It was Sarah's turn to nod, “I won't make a murderer of you, any more than I would commit suicide. When I am gone you have to do it, it won't be murder then, so don't think it will be.”

Of the two of them Sarah was the more religious. Max was always the one who attended church 'just in case', he felt he that an hour of fellowship was not as important as a week of treating people right, but went with Sarah at her insistence. Sarah was far more apt to obey the commandments to the letter than Max and had very strong feelings on things like abortion, suicide and murder. During their college years she had even been arrested protesting at a candle light vigil the night Colorado put one of it's murderers to death. The two of them had gone around several times about raising the children in the church, Sarah did not approve of Max's casual attitude regarding their religious education. It was for this reason alone, Max surmised, that Sarah would not put a gun to her own head and pull the trigger right now. Suicide was still a mortal sin and she fully expected to be waiting for her family in Heaven when they joined her.

“Max you have to promise me to take care of the kids when I am gone.”

“What the hell kind of a thing to say? I'm their father, I am not going to run off just because you are not around.”

“Oh I know you will be there for them, but I know how you are too. I want you to promise to make sure they continue, you know, in the church, if it is possible. It is what I want.”

“The church? What church? We will be lucky if the kids live to have kids, the way things are going.”

“I know but promise you will, if you can?” Sarah's face was pale and still sweaty.

“Dammit I thought I was going to get to weasel out of that.”

“This isn't a joke and you still haven't promised, it is my dying wish Max!” Sarah said seriously.

Sighing heavily, like a good martyr, Max replied, “I will do my best, you don't expect me to be all biblical on them right?”

“No, I couldn't squeeze blood from a rock, but you have to promise me that you will bring them up in the church. Say it.” she pressed.

“I promise I will do my best to raise our children in the church. There, good enough?”

She nodded and leaned back against the pillows piled behind her.

“That is just like you to make me promise that. I mean who says 'dying wish' anymore? That is only the stuff you see in movies!”

Sarah smiled, “I win another battle after all these years.”

“Oh you've won your share and we both know it.”

The smile stayed on her face and she nodded, “Sure, so have you, that is what being married is all about. Give and take. We had some good times?”

“We never made it to Hawaii.” Max said regretfully.

“Think about what we did do. We have two great kids, we took them all over, me and you traveled around like vagabonds after college before settling down. We have a strong family.”

“Yeah, I guess we do. It was Nick who settled us down as I remember.”

“Oh yes, he gave me pains developing and gave us pains the first six months of his life, the kid never slept!” said Sarah.

“Remember the drum set?” Max asked. Sarah's dad had given Nick a junior drum set for Christmas when Nick was four. “I just about banned your dad from the house after that!”

“Yeah but he gave us the car, it was the way his humor worked. Still I wasn't too sad when Nick 'lost' his drum sticks after a couple weeks.” said Sarah.

“Oh, I took one of them. I just couldn't stand it after awhile.”

“That's alright, I took the other a day later.”

“You did?!” Max was surprised.

“Yeah, I figured out you had snagged the first one, so you left me to finish the job. Typical really. I always wondered why you didn't snag both of them?”

“Well, I thought it would be suspicious if he lost them both at the same time. I actually thought he lost the other one on his own.”

“See? We are still learning things about each other. Well, you about me anyway.”

“Yeah, you were always the sneaky one, me? I am a straight arrow, predictable and reliable.”

“You come around eventually.” Sarah conceded.

Max just looked at his wife for awhile, then started crying again. “What am I going to do? What am I going to do without you?”

Sarah hugged him close and whispered, “Live. Take care of the kids, but live your life.”

They stayed that way for awhile before Sarah finally said, “Max, I want to go to the attic.”

“What?”

“Lets go to the attic, then, if you have to do it, no one will see and you can just leave me here in our house. I know you aren't going to stay, right?”

“We haven't made plans yet.”

“You didn't come to get me and the kids so we could all stay here, I know you are going to go somewhere. You can leave me in the attic, let me stay where I had so many good times.”

“In the attic?”

“Max.” Sarah said sharply, “You know what I mean. The attic is closer than most people get to be to their homes when they die. Say a prayer over me for the kids and then just go. Come on, lets move up there now.”

“Is it time? Already?”

“No, but I keep feeling weaker and I don't want you to have to carry me up there. Where we slept should still be there, I will just curl up and go to sleep. I will be okay and you can do what needs to be done after.”

They went out into the hall together and Max pulled down the stairway ladder using the rope he had tied to it again. As they went up Max noticed someone had cleaned all the fallen insulation up out of the hallway and put a piece of wood over the hole on the attic side to keep more from falling out.

Sarah settled down among the kid's sleeping bags and stuffed animals, then pointed at the kid's pillows, “You better toss these down, Jessica likes her own pillow and I don't want her to come looking for it later.

Stewart's head popped up at the attic access. “Everything okay up here?”

“Yeah, Sarah is going to settle in here.” Max replied.

“I...yeah, okay, I can see that makes sense. How are you doing Sarah?”

“I have been better, I feel weaker by the minute, maybe you can ask Amelia what comes next?”

Stewart didn't shy away from the question, “I did. You die. Then come back. I am really sorry Sarah. I wish there was something I could do.”

“It isn't your fault Jane.”

“Do you need anything?” Stewart asked.

“For tonight? No. But take care of Max and the kids for me, will you?”

“I had planned to, once we figure out what we are doing from here. I think we will talk about that...tomorrow. Well if you don't need anything else I am going to duck out of here. Max...don't do anything foolish, okay?”

“Me?”

Stewart just nodded and climbed back down the ladder into the house. Max heard her talking softly with Amelia, then they moved off out of hearing range.

BOOK: Mark Clodi
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