The Scattered and the Dead (Book 1): A Post-Apocalyptic Series (26 page)

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Authors: Tim McBain,L.T. Vargus

Tags: #post-apocalyptic

BOOK: The Scattered and the Dead (Book 1): A Post-Apocalyptic Series
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He loved his job, loved to watch the garbage water squish everywhere once that blade did its thing, loved the sound of different items being destroyed. He lived to throw in new things: lamps, recliners, big screen TVs, microwaves.

One day he watched a black and white cat paw at a garbage can up ahead. It got scared of the truck’s noise and ran into some bushes as they got closer, but he called it over. He kneeled down and cupped his hand to make it look like he had a treat for it. The cat hesitated for a second and then trotted to him. The fact that he reeked like garbage juice might have helped, too. He wasn’t sure.

He felt a tingle run up and down his entire body when he tossed the cat in and pulled the lever, a surge of energy that made all of his hairs stand on end. The blade swung down. This popping noise was different than any of the others. It made him hard right away. He had to put his jacket in front of it before they went to the next house, and he barely stopped giggling the whole rest of the day.

Even now, he laughed thinking about that sound. It was like something from a cartoon. Like Wile E. Coyote splatting against a rock wall.

He got three cats and two dogs that week.

And now he handled more dead animals, picking at the pieces of road kill he’d gathered and laying them out in their proper spots, waiting for them to help him find new pets to play with.

 

 

 

Erin

 

Presto, Pennsylvania

37 days after

 

Something dark stirred in the front yard. A big, black dog. She could tell something was off, though. It wasn’t moving right. It was writhing. Twitching. Erin grabbed the back of Izzy’s t-shirt to stop her. They did not tangle with dogs.

“What is it?” Izzy said, and even though she’d said it quietly, it was enough.

It burst toward them, but at the same time it exploded, breaking into half a dozen pieces that flew into the sky. Erin pulled Izzy backward a few steps before she realized it wasn’t a dog at all, but a group of buzzards.

They swarmed overhead in a low circle, not ready to give up their meal just yet. One of the birds broke from the flock. It swooped down and perched on the top of a white pickup truck parked in the driveway, head angled sideways to better watch them.

Erin moved forward, but Izzy didn’t budge.

“I don’t like them.”

“It’s alright. They only eat dead stuff.”

“But they’re huge!”

Erin didn’t deny it. At this proximity, they seemed pretty imposing for giant garbage-eating chickens.

For some reason, she thought of the time a seagull had shat on her head. It was on a school field trip to the museum, and they were outside eating lunch in a little courtyard. She felt the wet splat hit her skull, felt the ooze of liquid seep through her hair and drip onto her scalp. And her first thought was that she hoped no one had noticed. For some reason, it made her feel embarrassed. And vulnerable. Like at any moment, the whole class would turn toward her so they could point and laugh at the white splotch on her head.

As calmly as possible, she made her way to the bathroom. She grabbed a wad of the crappy industrial-grade toilet paper and pressed it to her head. Her face was bright red in the mirror, and standing there staring back at herself, tears started to form in her eyes. It seemed like a bit of an over-reaction, and yet there she was. On the brink of crying because a bird pooped on her.

Thinking back on it now, all she could think was that she'd let a hilarious, once-in-a-lifetime situation go to waste because she'd been too self-conscious. Too worried that someone would laugh at her.

She took a deep breath and announced it to the world.

"One time a bird crapped on my head.”

Lines formed on Izzy’s forehead. "What?"

"Yep." Erin held her fist over her head, then spread her fingers, mimicking an explosion. "Plop!"

Izzy laughed. And Erin laughed.

"My grandpa always said that was good luck," Izzy said.

"Really?"

"Yep."

Erin tipped her head to the side, considering it. “I accept.”

The path to the front door took them close to whatever the vultures had been feeding on. Only the ribcage remained, and the surface had been shredded by the beaks of the carrion birds. It looked more like it was made of frayed rope than bone.

“Don’t look,” Erin said, but Izzy was already staring.

For once the door was unlocked. Not a complete shock, since it seemed the former occupant had wandered into the front yard to die. Erin did a quick sweep, and then she and Izzy started their inventory.

The house yielded a few things to add to their stockpile: more beans, a couple rolls of toilet paper, some candles and batteries. She pocketed some cash in a purse they found in the foyer. But it was the garage that got Erin’s blood pumping.

It was brand new, still in the box. 4000 watts. She didn’t know anything about generators, but that sounded like a lot of watts.

This was it. The solution to all of their problems. She imagined a ray of light piercing the clouds, a perfect beam coming through the singular garage window to shine on the black and yellow box. A choir of angels began singing the Hallelujah chorus.

Lights. Hot water. Television. She didn’t figure any of the channels still worked, but they could watch DVDs. Play video games. Listen to music. All because of a beautiful thing called electricity.

“Thomas Edison, you beautiful bastard,” she said.

Izzy pressed her lips together, and before she could even say it, Erin cut in.

“Yeah, I know.
Language
. But this is fudging awesome.”

Erin tried to pick up the box but only managed to scoot it across the floor. She adjusted her grip and tried again. It didn’t budge. It was too bulky for her to get her arms all the way around, so she couldn’t get a good handle on it.

“Help me out.”

Izzy set down her bag and stooped at the other end of the box.

“One, two, three-”

They both grunted under the weight, but the box lifted. It soared a whole three inches off the ground before Izzy’s end started to teeter. The thud of the box hitting the concrete floor echoed around the garage.

“It’s too heavy,” Izzy said, clenching and unclenching her fists, trying to relieve her hands after the strain.

Erin noted the text printed on the bottom right corner of the generator box: NET WT. 94 LBS.

Why the hell was it so heavy?

She scratched at a mosquito bite on the back of her arm, annoyed. They’d never be able to carry it all the way. She needed a way to transport it that didn’t require brute strength. But how?

Might as well start with the easiest and most obvious method. She opened the screen door that separated the garage and the house, Izzy following close behind.

“We need keys.” As the words tumbled out of her mouth, her gaze fell on the table next to the door. Or more accurately, the purse resting on top of the table. She thrust a hand inside, rooting around until she removed a triumphant fist clutching a key chain.

“What do we need those for?” Izzy asked.

Erin stepped outside, disrupting the vultures again. The beasts flapped back into the air.

“For our truck.”

Her feet crunched over the gravel. The door opened and she climbed up to the driver’s seat.

As she settled into the fake leather, the stink of new car smell wafted over her. She remembered people remarking that they liked the scent of it, but she never understood the appeal. To her it smelled like plastic and rubber. A sickly sweet chemical combination that made her stomach hurt.

Izzy hopped onto the running board and poked her head inside.

“But we already tried this. It never works.”

“This time it will,” Erin said.

“How do you know?”

Erin watched Izzy reach overhead, grappling the roof of the truck with both hands. She lifted her feet and dangled from the truck like a monkey.

“I just do.”

Erin put the key in, closed her eyes, and turned the ignition. Nothing happened.

Erin’s eyes opened. She let go, tried again.

Nothing.

She punched the steering wheel and the horn blared, scaring the shit out of her, Izzy, and the buzzards, who had just settled back in on their buffet.

Izzy dropped from her hanging position, stumbled backward in the gravel. She bumped into the door of the truck before catching her balance. Erin looked down at her, their momentary fear dissolving into a fit of laughter.

“Well the horn still works,” Erin said.

She scrambled down from the seat, slamming the door. She barely even knew how to drive, so maybe it was for the best. She’d only done the first half of driver’s ed. Not that her lack of a license mattered a whole lot now.

Back in the garage, she looked for anything that might help her move the generator. The best she came up with was looping some rope around the box. She handed one end of the rope to Izzy.

“What am I supposed to do with this?”

Erin wrapped her end around her waist, yanking until the rope was taut.

“We’re going to pull it. Like a dog sled.”

She surged forward, straining against the weight of the generator.

“Come on! Mush!”

They got as far as the door before needing a break. She plopped down on the box, wiping sweat from her face and trying to catch her breath.

Izzy handed her the water bottle they’d brought along. Erin took a warm swig and almost spit it out, expecting the water to be as cool as it was fresh from the well. She forced herself to swallow it. Better than nothing.

Through the screen of the front door, she watched the vultures pick at the corpse in the yard. The sun was just kissing the tree line. It would be dark before long.

Erin clenched her jaw, not wanting to give up yet and knowing she had to. They’d only managed to drag the box twenty feet before they collapsed in exhaustion. It would take them hours to haul it back to the house. And it was an uphill walk.

That night she lay awake in bed for a long time. She knew she was tired, but she struggled against it, desperate for a plan that would solve the generator problem.

Maybe a wheelbarrow would work. They’d need to figure out how to get the generator into it, to start. Assuming they succeeded in that, it was still going to be a long, slow walk back to the house, toting almost a hundred pounds.

She felt the pull of sleep urging her to close her eyes. It reminded her of standing on the beach when she was a kid, and how the waves would lap over her feet. As the water retreated, the sand around her toes drained away with it, and the magnetic draw of the tide tugged at her feet.

Erin’s eyelids drooped closed and she let go, allowing the current of sleep to drag her under.

 

 

 

Travis

 

Hillsboro, Michigan

57 days after

 

Scuffs and grunts and scrapes and thuds echoed about the room. Travis shuffled to his right, toward the place where he could see the muffled glow of the light on one wedge of the floor. He reached under the desk, hand bouncing along the carpet, and then he found the cigar shaped tube of plastic, scooped it, pressed the button, and returned it to his mouth in the dark.

He kept moving, sure they had a good idea where he was based on the light moving and clicking off. He moved toward them, hoping that would come as a surprise.

His cheeks stung from smiling so hard. The grin itself felt less evil now, more like an involuntary expression of this level of stimulation, so much adrenalin that in most ways he felt numb. He wasn’t scared. He wasn’t anxious. He was vaguely excited and otherwise empty.

He heard a metallic sound, someone doing something with a gun, he thought, but he couldn’t tell based on the noise. Immediately he racked the shotgun. Even the second time, the noise was shocking in its volume. The scuffling on the carpet sounded panicked now, and he heard the zipper of a sleeping bag followed by the patter of footsteps on carpet. Someone ran away.

Well, that might be good. He’d heard about that before, the sound of a shotgun making people run away. Thinking about it, it only sounded like one set of feet, though. If so, that would mean someone was still here with him, waiting in the dark.

He reached up, clicked on the flashlight, wheeled toward the figure standing to his right. The beam glinted on the metal of the gun and flicked to the man’s eyes. He squinted, and his nose scrunched up in the light. The guy’s arm jerked, the pistol in his hand blazing and popping. The shot missed high, the bullet buzzing over Travis’s head and piercing the wall behind him.

And then he squeezed the trigger in turn. BOOM. Another face gone. Glop slapped the wall behind the guy, like a can of red paint splattered there. The figure tumbled to the ground, folding in all of the places possible.

Now feeling came rushing back to him all at once, heat and blood and hatred roaring through him, flushing his face. He looked down on the corpse, the head like a bashed in red melon, the back of it all blown out.

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