The Hungry 4: Rise of the Triad (The Sheriff Penny Miller Series) (17 page)

BOOK: The Hungry 4: Rise of the Triad (The Sheriff Penny Miller Series)
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“Goddamn it, Rat. You too, Lovell. Scratch is a friend of yours. How can you just turn off your humanity for a damn paycheck?”
“That’s my business and not your problem. Follow orders or else.”
Inside her head, Miller thought as loudly as she could to Rat.
I learned something a long time ago, Rat. The only correct response to an ultimatum is to say, “Fuck you!”
Don’t do it.
“Rat, I’m going to beat you like you owe me money.”
Miller swung the helmet as hard as she could. It sailed directly at Rat.
No one was there. The helmet kept flying.
Rat was already off the observation platform and standing next to Miller before the helmet reached a startled Lovell, who flinched and dropped his weapon as the floating helmet struck his forehead with enough force to shatter his skull. Lovell staggered away and dropped to his knees. He fell over with his face crushed and bleeding. One leg twitched. The other soldiers hadn’t yet had time to react. They were still standing frozen on the wooden platform. Miller hadn’t intended to kill anyone. It had just worked out that way.
Now that was fucking stupid, Lovell wasn’t your enemy.
Rat had drawn her side arm. She pointed it at Miller’s head.
I was aiming for you,
Miller thought.
You would have survived.
Hitting Lovell was an accident, just like the rest of this whole damned mess.
Rat hesitated a second, then squeezed the trigger. Miller deflected Rat’s arm just as the pistol went off. Taking Rat by the wrist, she twisted hard, hoping the bone would break under her super strength. It didn’t.
Frustrated, Rat swung at Miller, threw a wicked left hook. Miller ducked just in time. She swept her foot to knock Rat off her feet. Rat went down, hard. The soldiers were finally coming out of their trance. They ran down the ramp intending to separate the women. They seemed ridiculously slow and clumsy in the desert heat. Miller started to kick Rat in the kidney. She was too late.
Rat was back up in a heartbeat. The soldiers were coming.
“Shoot her,” Rat ordered. Miller sensed reluctance in her voice.
One soldier was staring down at Lovell’s corpse, looking a bit sickened. He said, “But we might hit you, ma’am.”
Before she could say something else, Miller grabbed Rat by the lapels of her uniform. She head butted Rat in the face then backed off. Rat grunted, but she didn’t cry out or stop to inspect the damage. She just launched a roundhouse kick at Miller’s head. It grazed her face as she shifted away. The soldiers looked both confused and fascinated as the women danced around each other. Rat kicked again, wicked strong and blindingly fast. The sun beat down.
Miller ducked, but just barely. Damn, Rat was quick. They separated for a moment. Rat waved at the soldiers as if changing her mind. They didn’t seem to be following the action well. It occurred to Miller that the two of them were so accelerated that the soldiers may have only seen crisp blurs of motion. They were likely having trouble distinguishing between the two women as they fought. She tried to think of how to use that fact to her advantage.
I’m going to kick your ass, once and for all,
Rat thought.
I’m right here,
Miller replied.
Hit me with your best shot.
They grappled for a long second. Then Rat caught Miller by the wrist and flipped her onto her back, right at Alex’s feet. Alex was looking down at them, confused and unwilling to take sides. Rat went to kick Miller in the face. Miller grabbed Rat’s boot and twisted it, tossing her away. Rat hit hard but rolled and got back up. Her nose was bleeding.
Miller was standing an instant later.
Someone fired a tentative shot. It clipped the railing next to Miller’s hand. Miller caught fresh movement out of the corner of her eye. It was Alex. He was finally getting into the game. He was on her side. He went for the soldiers.
Miller threw a series of haymakers at Rat, who expertly blocked each one. Then Rat jabbed at Miller’s head, catching her in the chin with a wicked blow. Bright lights flickered and the summer day grew cold for a second.
“Stop,” Alex called.
Miller was knocked backwards. She checked her jaw, which was miraculously intact. She rolled away, and a bullet missed her leg. Rat was already standing and waiting to resume their match. Two more shots were fired, and splintered the wood near Miller’s feet. The firing stopped. When Miller looked up at the solders, only one was standing, and he had his hands in the air. Alex had taken down the others. Miller waved and smiled.
Then Miller saw that Rat was looking up as well. She took advantage of the moment and launched herself at Rat. She hit Rat and tackled her down to the ground. Then Miller punched Rat in the throat.
Rat caught her hand, held it and twisted. Miller resisted.
You’re going to have to do better than that.
All right, I will.
Miller brought her knee up into Rat’s groin. She did it three times, with everything she had, then kneed her in the thigh muscle. Rat grunted, but still didn’t let go of Miller’s hand. Miller twisted her body around in an attempt it to free it, but no matter what she did, Rat held on.
A series of shots went off on the observation platform. This time the bullets struck next to Rat’s head. She flinched and jerked away. Miller used that distraction to punch her opponent in the face, stunning Rat, who let go of her hand. The shots stopped at that point and Miller was glad. She liked Rat. Rat had saved her life more than once. But Miller also knew that if she didn’t finish this now, she would have a pissed-off enemy to contend with forever, one who up until then had been winning the dispute pretty handily. So she punched Rat in the face. She slammed her head into the wood. She slammed it down again, and again, and again. She didn’t want to do it, but she did.
Rat went limp, with her pretty face bloody but otherwise intact. Miller looked down at Rat, her hand poised for another punch, but the woman had had enough. Rat was out cold. Thankfully, murder was not necessary. Miller coughed. Her chest hurt. She stood up and leaned on the railing for support. She felt incredibly thirsty and hot and was panting for air. She caught movement out of the corner of her eye and flinched.
Suddenly Alex was standing next to her, with a rifle in his hand. She looked up at him, and realized that without Rat, the telepathic link between the three of them was broken. They were no longer a triad. Miller was relieved. That whole telepathy thing was really starting to piss her off.
“We don’t have much time,” Miller said. “One of them must have radioed in.”
Alex shrugged. “They didn’t. It all happened too fast. They were standing there looking at Lovell and trying to figure out what was going on. If they had radioed for help, we would have heard it. I would have, anyway. But it won’t take them long to come looking.”
“No. It won’t.”
“Okay, Sheriff, so what now?”
“I say we go back, rescue Scratch and see if we can put an end to this project.”
“I’m in, but how do you propose we accomplish that? I don’t care how fast and strong we are now. There’s still only the two of us.”
And Miller said, “I have an idea.”
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
THE ZOMBIE CORRAL
Unhhh hunhh hunhh…
An old woman in a torn hospital gown stared dully back at Alex through the thick, patterned wire. One of her eyes was gone and the other looked dead as last week’s oyster. Her white hair was all bunched down like flattened cotton and her two front teeth were missing. She tried to bite Alex anyway. He stepped back from reflex and then giggled like a schoolboy at his own panic. He was not doing so well. This close to the horde, the poor guy seemed inches from madness at times, and Miller didn’t blame him one damned bit. At least he didn’t seem to have Talk Radio K-ZOM in his brain. For her part, Miller was being tortured. It was full-on chaos. Despite her best efforts to turn them off the eerie voices in her mind kept right on shrieking and babbling. She stared straight ahead. The corral was full of rotting bodies and the stench was overwhelming.
“Stay loose, Alex.”
They stood side by side facing the thick fence that encircled the zombie enclosure. A few curious living-impaired individuals shambled their way, sensing fresh meat. Miller shaded her eyes. The once bright sun was sinking into the dusky shadows of the mountains to the west. They didn’t have a lot of daylight left.
“Alex?”
“Guess I’m okay, Sheriff. How are you holding up?”
“I feel like she beat me like a rented mule,” Miller said.
“She did.” Alex gave a wry smile. “So what’s the plan?”
Miller almost put her hands on the electrified wire fence. She didn’t. She was fairly sure the voltage wouldn’t kill her, though it might singe her flesh. It would most likely just tingle and jumble her nerves for a moment. But she couldn’t be certain of that. She studied on the fence for another minute. It was well made. They Army Corps of Engineers had done a good job, sinking concrete pillars and iron pipe, stringing the fencing three and four times to protect the soldiers from the horde of zombies. Miller briefly considered ripping a piece apart with her bare hands, but no matter how super strong she was, she was still human. This was sharp steel wire. She maybe could tolerate the voltage, but the keen edges would probably tear her hands to shreds.
Unhh hunhh hunhh… Lonely… hungry… sad… angry… Why? Why?
Miller stepped back from the fence. She closed her eyes and took a deep breath. This close to the zombie horde, she was having trouble concentrating. Their dark, primitive emotions weighed her down. They weren’t actually words; they were just feelings from a preverbal consciousness. These creatures were in such agony. Miller felt an overwhelming sense of grief that made her chest feel thick and heavy. She knew Alex was studying her and wondering if he’d made a mistake by breaking free of Rat and her bodyguards. Miller opened her eyes. It took everything that she had to hold things together. Just thinking clearly took a monumental effort.
“Can you jump?”
Alex looked up at the top of the fence. “Just jump over a nine-foot fence? Are you kidding? Besides, if we go in there those things will tear us to bits.”
“No, actually, I’m not kidding.” Miller looked up at the razor wire that lined the very top of the fence. It was indeed a long way up. It was also intimidating to picture climbing back down the other side and into the enclosure. But just going around the damn thing wasn’t an option. Evening wasn’t far off. Time was running out. Rat and the guards had to be awake again by now. They’d find their communication gear wrecked, but Rat was a professional. She’d figure something out, or just run like hell in their direction with the others lagging behind. Either way it wouldn’t be long before their options were narrowed. Someone would be coming after them and soon.
Alex said, “I’m not used to this shit.”
“We don’t have time for superhero lessons,” Miller said. “You’re just going to have to get the hang of this as you go.”
They had only one choice, go into the teeming throng of undead and attempt to break through to the other side. Something Rat and her minions would never attempt to do, that much seemed certain. Perhaps Rat was crazy enough to try it but the soldiers wouldn’t last a minute. The zombies would chow down.
“Ready?”
Alex nodded reluctantly.
Miller had a sickening feeling that this decision would doom them both. That it would be the last thing she’d ever do. If it failed she would never see Scratch again. Her mind was spinning in circles, filled with gruesome, imported images and intense, black thoughts. Her soul was a maelstrom of death and destruction. It was as if she had become a radio receiver open to every frequency. Every creature within a country mile was free to beam its tormented thoughts into her already overloaded brain.
Alex was unaware of the internal chaos she suffered. Miller still had no idea why. Was she the relay station for their triad? Had she simply reacted differently than the others due to the fact that she’d been dosed before? There was no way to explore that issue now. She had to save Scratch. Miller needed Scratch. He was her last remaining anchor to reality—to
sanity
—and it had always been up to her to keep him alive. When all else failed Penny Miller would always do her duty. She opened her mouth to speak.
Unhhh hunhh hunhh!
Four of the zombies suddenly attacked the fence. They were shocked backwards and smoke rose from the wire. They were not super charged. The stink of burning, already necrotic flesh filled the air. Miller almost vomited.
Alex watched Miller. He had gone pale. They exchanged looks. Whatever Miller had in mind had better work.
“Here we go.” Miller stepped back from the fence a few feet, bent her legs, took a few deep breaths and leaned forward. She gripped her rifle tightly. She imagined leaping high, turning her back flat to clear the fence, sailing just enough to clear it. Then she just pushed off the ground with as much of her strength as she thought prudent. She launched herself into the air.
“Holy mother of God,” Alex said.
Miller grunted as she cleared the fence. She landed a few yards inside. She came down with her knees bent, absorbed the shock easily and didn’t even need to roll.
Unnhh… hunnhh…
The rest of the zombies, including those who hadn’t yet taken an interest in them, formed into a half circle, grunting and drooling and steadily closing the gap. They’d have to be careful. Miller knew that they had limited ammunition—not nearly enough for headshots all around. They were way, way outnumbered. And while Miller knew she could take on quite a few in a fight with nothing more than a machete, barehanded she would still be vulnerable. Her superpowers didn’t cover getting her throat ripped out. She and Alex were going to have to stay back to back and constantly moving if they hoped get out of this one alive.
“Come on, Alex,” Miller called. “We ain’t got all day. I need you in here with me!”
“I don’t know if I can do that.” The tension in his voice was palpable.
“Goddamn it, Alex, if you stop to think about this, we’re both dead. Now move your sorry ass.”
Miller backed away from the horde of zombies. They were a wide blur of horrid faces, torn bodies and shredded clothing. Their telepathic voices were so powerful, so heart-breaking, she didn’t dare let herself visualize these creatures as anything but mindless shapes with teeth and filthy, clutching fingers. Miller swallowed. The closest zombie, a thin man with red hair, reached out for her. She tried not to think about who the poor slob used to be, though she had the sickening feeling she would find out if she let herself ponder him for too long—that she’d have to take in everything he’d once been, everything he’d lost and now would never be; also that absorbing that might drive her totally insane. No, Miller had to let the dead be dead. She couldn’t fix these things and she couldn’t cure them, as much as she kept wanting to, that just couldn’t be done. It was simple. The man wanted to destroy her. She had one option.
Kill him again
.
So when the red-haired man reached for her. Miller spun the zombie around, picked him up by his belt and collar, and hurled him as hard as she could at the approaching horde. Zombies stumbled and fell and went down like bowling pins. The red-haired man hit the ground hard. His passing cleared a path for Miller to follow, a path deeper into the horde, one that would be open only for a moment.
“Alex?”
Miller turned. She looked back through the wire, but Alex wasn’t there. She spotted a dust trail coming, moving in from the north. Miller squinted and shaded her eyes against the low sunset. There. In the distance, a vehicle was moving, racing closer. Miller raised the rifle, ready to shoot if necessary, but she also had to keep one eye on the zombies that were fast approaching. It was all happening too quickly. She was caught between the proverbial rock and a hard place. Alex had vanished.
And now someone was coming.
Miller said, “Fuck a duck.”
The vehicle was huge—a Hummer, from the looks of it. It was headed towards her. It was definitely coming from the direction shooting range. Had Rat regained consciousness and found transportation? Had she come after Miller to kill her, or just to take her in? Was it just one of the other soldiers transporting fresh zombies to the corral? Miller was stuck wondering, friend or foe? She couldn’t remain where she was either way. The zombie horde was sealing her off from the exit. The situation was untenable. She didn’t know what was going on and there was only one way to find out. She had to choose a direction.
Miller kicked a wide, overweight female zombie in the stomach. The woman’s wig fell off into the dirt. The other zombies murmured, both in her ears and in her mind. Miller backed away from them, deliberately moving deeper into the horde. Scratch was good as dead if she got captured. But then, as the Hummer approached, the driver honked the horn. Miller looked back. It was Alex at the wheel and he was waving.
“Wait!” Miller called, as she realized what was about to happen. Alex did not slow down as he approached the perimeter fence. She looked back over her shoulder. The zombies were no longer attacking. They weren’t even moving. Perhaps sensing her intensity, they’d all stopped in their tracks. They watched dully, like a crowd at a NASCAR event. A small Black child stared at her, neck broken, head titled at an odd angle. Miller had to block his thoughts to keep from her own from becoming a gibbering mess.
She realized the Hummer was coming right at them, accelerating by the second.
“Alex, what are you doing?”
Alex appeared to have second thoughts right about then but it was too late.
The huge Hummer ran directly into the wire fence, its impact less than ten feet to Miller’s left side. The horde of waiting zombies was blown backwards by the force. The concrete cracked, the wood splintered, the top of the electric fence flew apart in a rain of white sparks. Miller gasped. She had to scramble to get out of the way of the debris as the Hummer crushed forward into the mob. The large fence bowed inwards, but in the end it didn’t fully collapse. Instead, it wrapped itself around the Hummer like a cocoon and flipped the vehicle over on one side. Miller gaped. The destruction was awesome to behold. The combined bulk of the fence and Hummer completely crushed over a dozen of the lethargic zombies. The Hummer finally stopped sliding. The wheels spun uselessly as the vehicle finally settled on its roof.
Unhhh hunhh…
The horde of creatures seemed puzzled and momentarily paralyzed by indecision. They stared at the Hummer and milled around. Taking advantage of the pause, Miller climbed over the wreckage to get to where Alex was trapped. The hole in the fence was visible, the empty desert beyond, the lengthening shadows that stroked the sand like ghostly fingers. Miller forgot everything else for a minute. She had to rescue Alex. By the time she got over the bulk of the vehicle to the driver’s side, he was already pushing the door open. It screamed like an eagle.
She held out her hand to help Alex out. “Are you hurt?”
“Only my pride,” Alex mumbled. He stood still on the side of the Hummer and grimaced without looking at her. “That’s one tough fucking fence.”
And then he giggled again. His mind was slipping.
Men.
“Of all the silly-assed, pig-headed, thoughtless, stupid, fucked-up ideas you could have come up with, you had to think of that one? Smashing the damned fence down so an undead army could escape into the wild?”
“My bad.”
The zombies had already regrouped. They moved quickly, at least by zombie standards. Freedom beckoned. Several were climbing over the razor-wire tops of the crushed fence. Their flesh tore open but rarely bled, and of course they did not feel the pain. They seemed to know the wiser course was escape, though Miller couldn’t have said how or why. They were a stumbling, bumbling, ugly mess of dead flesh and bone, but their group mind seemed to be working just fine.
“What a flea-brained thing to do,” Miller sputtered. “We want the zombies inside the base, not wandering through the desert like a bunch of undead, pissed off Israelites. When did you forget how to follow orders, surfer boy?”
Alex scowled. The zombies broke around the Hummer, half to the left and half to the right. Some fell on the wire, apparently so that others could climb over and escape. Alex seemed to catch the tempo of her profanity. His time in the service shined through. “Look, I don’t know what your problem is, lady. I know you’re supposed to be the expert when it comes to fighting zombies, but I wasn’t about to walk my ass through a Goddamned sold-out rock concert crowd of stinky-assed folk with just my good looks to see me through to the other side.”
Miller looked at him in disbelief. He was starting to pick up her speech patterns. She had one whopper of a headache. Miller felt her stomach roll over again. The drug had her dazed. She rubbed her temples. The voices from the zombie horde were getting louder and somehow
clearer
, and the effect was creating one hell of a mess in her brain. Miller knew when she was whipped. She had to get this over with before her head exploded. It was scorched from all the anguish and hopelessness continuously flooding her tired mind.

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