Read Taking It Back Online

Authors: Joseph Talluto

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Taking It Back (28 page)

BOOK: Taking It Back
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“What do we do about getting back home?” Charlie asked, adjusting the sack on his shoulder.

I looked up the canal. “Take the boat, of course.” Tommy was moving down the canal at a decent clip, steering the pontoons over to the landing. Charlie and I stepped over and onto the boat, with Charlie unloading his burden at the rear. I plopped down into a chair and leveled a gaze at Tommy, who seemed remarkably unfazed.

“Finish your business?” he asked innocently, steering the boat away from the landing and heading back down the canal. I looked back and saw flames shooting out of the windows of the nurse’s lounge.

Rest in peace
, Ellie. I thought.
Rest in peace
.

I nodded, then fixed Tommy with a stare. “Any particular reason why you decided to go for a cruise down the canal and leave Charlie and I to fend for ourselves?” I looked over at Angela. “I thought maybe you were a good liar and I was going to have to hunt you down.”

Angela looked scared and Tommy looked hurt. “I know how it looks, but I think you’ll forgive us in a second.” Tommy nodded to Angela, who handed me a piece of paper. Curious, I opened it and stared. I looked up.

“What…where…how did you?” I was stunned into near silence. Charlie came over and I handed the note to him and he looked at Angela and Tommy as well.

“I can’t take credit. Angela found it,” Tommy said.

I looked over at Angela. If she had ever needed to prove her worth, she had just done so and in spades. “Tell me,” I said.

Angela smiled and said, “It was by accident, really. I was standing over on the edge of the canal and a piece of paper floated by. It had writing on it, so I fished it out and saw it was a survivor note, like the ones families used to write when they were escaping sieges.”

I stared hard at her and Angela shrugged. “My grandfather was a survivor of the siege of Stalingrad when he was six years old. His mother wrote a note in the hopes they would be found by his father. People wrote hundreds of these notes, hoping someone would find them and be able to reunite with them later.

“Anyway, I showed it to Tommy, who thought we should head upriver a bit to see what we might find. We figured you all wouldn’t be out for a bit and if you were you would just wait a minute.”

I just shook my head and then Tommy asked Charlie, “We called you on the radio, why didn’t you answer?”

Charlie looked sheepish as he retrieved it from his pack. “Forgot to turn it on,” he said, fiddling with it. I couldn’t blame him since I forgot he even had it.

I changed the subject. “What did you find upriver?”

Tommy jumped in. “We didn’t see anything going north, which made sense since anyone in their right mind wouldn’t go to the city during the Upheaval.” Tommy cast a sly glance at me before continuing. “But we saw on the other side of the bridges people had left notes and markings as they fled the city. Those that used the canal, anyway. The closer we got to the city, the more notes we saw. Then, when we were about to turn around and head back, we saw the note in your hand. Angela wouldn’t have noticed it except it was so odd.”

I looked down at the note. Just like my brother to do something to get noticed, even in the middle of a crisis. It read
Eagles at Fort St. Louis’
in large black print, then in smaller writing, it read
‘Tell John Talon his brother lives and will look for him at the Leap.’
I turned the note over in my hands and then gently folded it and put it in my pocket next to Ellie’s rings. At the moment it was precious to me, as it was the last thing my brother had left for me.

“Thank you,” I said quietly to Tommy and Angela, meeting their eyes in turn. “Thank you.”

“So what’s the plan, man?” Tommy asked, his hand on the throttle of the boat.

I looked around and realized the city had nothing I wanted. It was a nightmare to try anything and whoever was still living in there could have it. We would just get killed if we went farther in. If I wanted a close look at the city, a better bet would be to approach from the water side, like the lake. Even now, drifting as we were, we could hear the moans of thousands upon thousands of zombies. In a few years it would be safer as the zombies decayed past being a danger. But it would take years to clean them out to make the city livable. Not my work. Maybe Jake’s, in time. But not mine.

“We head back to the community, drop off the supplies and get Angela checked out and fed properly.” Angela shot me a look of pure gratitude. “After that, we head south as fast as we can. My brother has been out there with his family for over a year and I want to go get him.”

“Do you know where he is?” Charlie asked.

“Yes,” was all I had to say. The note put an idea in my head and Charlie and I had a few things to discuss.

 

 

 

26

 

We made for Leport as quickly as we could, yet it was still late evening when we finally pulled up to the dock. Charlie and I delivered the bag of medicines to the doctor and her jaw nearly dropped to the floor when she saw what we had procured. Tommy took Angela to the doctor as well and was declared healthy enough, if not well-fed. I talked to Nate for a brief time and he told me that he had figured I was successful when he saw the smoke from the burning hospital.

I went back to my home and after a brief reunion with Sarah and Jake, I spoke about the trip I needed to take in the morning. Sarah listened, then nodded.

“You know where he is, then?” she asked, looking at the note.

I nodded. “When we were kids, we used to go to Starved Rock all the time. My dad was a big fan and liked to take us to the hidden places that most people didn’t know about. As we grew older, we went back as adults with our families. If he’s anywhere, he’s there, and I have to say if I had thought of it, I would have gone there as well.”

Sarah looked at me funny. “You sound like it’s a place you want to go live.”

I shrugged. “It has a lot to offer defensively and if you’re into rustic living the river and forest would feed you forever. Indians had lived there for thousands of years.”

“What about the community you worked so hard to build and protect?” Sarah asked.

I gave it some thought before answering. “Sometimes I get the feeling I’m outliving my usefulness. Did the community fall apart when I was gone? Did the people not get fed or get water? No, they have managed to get on with their lives. Not the way they were before, but they are learning. Me, I wake up with a slightly uneasy feeling that people are whispering behind my back, saying things like ‘What has he done for us lately?’”

Sarah frowned. “That’s not true and you know it. Everyone respects you and nearly everyone here owes you their lives and the ability to go on living.”

“That’s the point. They owe me. And people as a rule do not like owing. It works on them and they wait for the time when the debt is called, so they can shout in righteous anger ‘Aha! I knew you’d call that debt in!’” I sat down and Jake toddled over to me, carrying a toy truck. His beautiful brown eyes lifted to mine and I picked up my baby, giving him a quick kiss on the cheek, my three days worth of beard tickling him.

“Where will you find peace, John? Where will you be happy?” Sarah asked, looking down at me.

I shook my head. “Maybe I never will. But I do know one thing for sure.”

“What’s that?”

“I want you with me wherever I am.”

Jake squeaked as his daddy’s lap suddenly became crowded.

In the morning, I headed down to the dock, Charlie following behind me. We were not going to take the pontoon boat this time, since we weren’t really on a sight-seeing tour and there was only the two of us. We got into the North River Seahawk boat, a small, twenty-four foot aluminum craft with a small cabin on the front. It was a decent find in the warehouses by the canal and we used it occasionally for ferrying across the water. I had planned on taking it to Lake Michigan, but not right now. It would serve well as a means of transportation and a good overnight cabin to sleep in. I figured it would take us the better part of a day to get to Starved Rock since it was roughly seventy-five miles from Leport to the park.

We pulled out from the town and I waved goodbye to Sarah and Jake as Charlie waved to Rebecca and Julia. I was not as heavily armed as before, carrying my trusty M1 carbine and my SIG. Charlie had his usual armament and we were provisioned for three days as usual. We carried additional rations in the boat since I had hopes of bringing my brother and his family back. If he wasn’t at Starved Rock, I was going to have to figure him gone.

We headed downstream, moving at a good clip. I hadn’t expected any trouble, but we had to pass Joliet again and I had the feeling they were keeping a watch for us. We had been moving back and forth on the rails to Coal City and beyond and it wasn’t much of a stretch to imagine someone trying to disrupt that process.

We passed by Romeoville and I remembered the fight we had there. Charlie remembered as well and we both shared a look. Farther south, we threw a wave to the people at Freeport, and I was surprised to see the number of people out and about, tending to gardens and making repairs to fences, windows, and such. It looked so normal that I had to do a double take. I shook my head to clear it and caught Charlie doing the same.

Half an hour later, we were on alert. We were passing close to Joslin and the air seemed tense. I couldn’t put a finger on what it was, but my instincts were screaming at me to be careful. Something was wrong. I didn’t see anything on the banks, save for the usual ghouls that patrolled the area, but I couldn’t shake the feeling that something was waiting for us.

Suddenly, Charlie slowed the boat and headed for the canal bank. Several zombies were nearby at the parking lot for the county courthouse. I found it oddly amusing that there were more than a few that had on the blaze orange jumpsuits of county detainees.

“What’s up?” I asked, jumping over the side and grabbing a rope. The zombies were about one hundred yards away and not an immediate danger.

“There’s a chain in the canal.” Charlie pointed along the bank and sure enough, a chain was looped around an abandoned car, the links disappearing under the surface of the water. On the other side of the canal, the chain emerged and was looped around another car.

“Nice,” I said, running over to the car. I was just about to lift the chain when a shot rang out from the courthouse, whipping past my ear and plowing into the blacktop. I dove to the front of the car and hunkered down as Charlie threw up his rifle and fired twice at a second-story window. I poked my head around the car and cursed. Three orange-suited zombies were closing fast and I couldn’t get up without running the risk of getting shot. Well, crap.

I stretched out on the ground in front of the car and took aim at the zombies. No good. From my angle, I couldn’t get head shots. I used the only alternative I had, which was to bring them down to my level. I aimed at the nearest one’s knee and fired, the .30 caliber bullet easily shattering the joint and bringing the zombie down. A second shot entered the top of its head and it stayed down permanently. I dropped the second one the same way, then ducked back as another round kicked up stinging stones in my face.

“Shit!” I yelled, spinning back to cover, wiping my eyes.

“You hit?” yelled Charlie, firing at the spot where he thought the shots came from.

“Not yet, but he’s getting warmer!”

I couldn’t stay where I was, because I could see more zombies headed my way and I couldn’t get up because the sniper was still shooting at me. To top off the fun, still more zombies were coming this way, attracted by the shots and potential feeding and I still had yet to remove the damned chain!

I had to do something, so I rolled out and shot a zombie dead, then rolled back as a barrage of shots punched holes in the car I was hiding behind. The shots proved to be just what Charlie needed and he fired one telling shot.

“Got him!” he called.

“Finally!” I yelled back. I scampered around to the back and removed the chain from the back of the car. At least ten zombies were bearing down on me and I dragged the chain to the water and dropped it in. Charlie had fired up the boat and was moving alongside the canal bank. I ran for a small way, away from the congregating zombies, and jumped the four feet of water to land clumsily on the boat.

“Thanks,” I said, rubbing a sore knee.

“No problem. We’re going to need to do something about Joslin,” Charlie said.

“Well, you know my solution to problems like that,” I replied.

“You wouldn’t happen to have been milking O’Leary’s cow way back in 1871, were you?”

“Good idea. We’ll try that in the fall when the winds kick up out of the south.”

“You’re nuts.”

 

27

 

We pulled away from Joslin, keeping a sharp eye out for any additional traps or snipers. I used Charlie’s scope and spotted what might have been two or three people on rooftops looking us over with binoculars. I sent a shot at one, causing them to duck for cover. It was over eight hundred yards and I would have been stunned by a hit, but I’ll take a duck at that range.

BOOK: Taking It Back
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