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Authors: Ben S Reeder

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BOOK: Zompoc Survivor: Exodus
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“Maya showed me the basics. It’s only got one clip for it though.”

“Magazine,” I corrected as I pulled two more from my vest and laid them on the table. “Clips are different. Take those. It’ll do for now, but we need to get you better trained on it. And on the M9. We’ll take care of that later. Right now, I need to get on the radio.” She nodded and scooped up the two spare magazines and tucked them into her pockets.

I left her sitting at the table and headed for the electrical shed. Inside was a metal folding table that held my shortwave radio, a heavily modified Icom unit that I had picked up when I was still in the Air Force. Laid out at the back of the shed were the batteries that stored the power generated by the windmill and solar panels. I’d put a kerosene heater out here for use in the winter, and a single energy efficient light bulb set in the rafters so I could work at night. I pulled the folding metal chair out and sat down at the table, then pulled my code book from its hiding place under the table. As the set warmed up, I plugged in the continuous wave key, which was basically a Morse code tapper, and opened the code book.

One of the things Nate Reid and I had worked out months ago was a series of five letter codes that each had a specific meaning. Without the code book, they read as gibberish. I entered the frequency we had decided on, then reached for the key. It was time to reach out and touch someone.

 

I woke up when Maya kissed me. My eyelids felt like they were glued shut, and I didn’t want to be awake, but there were these very soft lips against mine. Even sleep took second place to that. She giggled when I pulled her to me, and her lips went to my neck.

“Wake up sleepy head,” she whispered.

“Wha’ time izzit?” I mumbled.

“It’s six. The natives are getting restless. And dinner’s almost done.” That got my eyes open and my stomach rumbling. Maya smiled at me from inches away and sat up. “You have enough time to grab a hot shower, if you hurry.” I didn’t need any more prodding. I followed her down the short ladder and stumbled to the bathroom. The small shower was big enough for one person, or two if you didn’t mind it being a little tight, and the hot water heater was pretty efficient. The stream of warm water felt like magic on my skin, and I washed the sweat and grime of the past twenty four hours off of my body. Then I just stood there and let the heat soak through my muscles. When it finally started to cool off, I reluctantly shut it off and got dressed in a pair of sweats and a heavy sweatshirt. I emerged from the little bathroom feeling almost like a new person, though I still felt every bump and bruise from the journey out here.

The smell of beef stew hit my nose while I was putting my tennis shoes on in the front room, and I followed it to the kitchen, where Maya was stirring one of our large pots. She saw me coming and grabbed a bowl from the cabinet. Two ladles full of stew went into it, and she handed me the steaming bowl with a spoon before doling the same out to herself.

“Okay,” she said to Amy. “Remember, two full ladles for everyone, no more. And no seconds unless I say so.”

“I know, Mom,” Amy said as she rolled her eyes. “This has to last us for Goddess knows how long, this is all we have ‘til we grow our own.” She quoted Maya in a tired voice as she grabbed a pair of potholders and picked up the bubbling pot of stew. We followed her out and sat at the table. One of our lanterns was lit and shedding a circle of light on the table. Someone had laid a fire in the firepit, and it was crackling gently, providing more light and some welcome heat against the evening’s chill. More bowls were already stacked and waiting, and she served the stew out with exacting precision, even quelling her own father’s rebellious look with a glare she had to have inherited genetically from her mother.

“This is all we have Dad,” she said. “We have no idea how long we have to make it last.”

“You didn’t plan for this?” he asked me snidely.

“If he didn’t, you’re damned lucky he decided to let you come along!” Cassie said, her own voice sharp. “If it wasn’t for them, you’d probably be dead right now. And my son and I would be locked in a cell or God knows what else. So do us all a favor and shut up.” She sat down and turned her back to Karl, her bowl held in shaking hands. Bryce went to stand next to her, and he gave Karl hateful looks over his mother’s shoulder.

“Is that it?” Karl said. “I’m lucky he allowed me to come along? So I’m just here on sufferance?”

“Both of you!” I snapped. “Stop. Rule twenty two. Watch out for your friends and family. That’s why you’re here, Karl. And no, I did
not
plan for this. I didn’t plan for zombies and I didn’t
plan
for having more people with us. But someone did. And as soon as we’re done eating, I’ll let you all in on the plan.” I sat down and dug in to my food, my stomach sour.

“Way ta go, dad,” Amy said as she sat down beside him. Porsche sat beside Cassie and nodded to Bryce, who sat across from her and started eating as well. For a few minutes, silence reigned. The stew was freeze-dried Mountain House, which was good on its own, but Maya always added some potatoes and bullion to bulk it up a little and add some stronger flavor to it. My spoon hit the bottom of the bowl too soon, both for my stomach’s taste and my brain’s. Maya, to my relief, forced Bryce and Amy to take seconds, and Karl didn’t object, which I counted as a minor miracle. Finally, I couldn’t put the moment off any longer.

“All right, boys and girls,” I said as I got to my feet. The sun had faded from the sky, leaving the lantern and the fire as my only sources of light. Six pairs of eyes followed me as I went to the other side of the fire and tossed a log onto it. “First of all, we’re not staying here. I got in touch with Nate today, and he gave me a location for us to meet him. He also gave me something else: the combinations to the locks on his storage sheds. Everything we need for the trip should be inside.”

“You talked to my dad?” Bryce asked.

“Not exactly. It was all in Morse code. But he did ask about you and your Mom.” I dug out the slip of paper I’d written the combination to one of the locks on and held it out to him. “Here, I think he’d like it if you opened up this one. I’ll get the other one.” We went to the two cargo containers. I directed Bryce to the one on the right, and I went to the other one. The heavy combination locks popped open and I pulled mine free, then lifted the bar and pulled the door to mine open. A set of fluorescent lights blinked on as I pulled the door wide, revealing the contents in all their glory. My jaw could have hit the floor.

Inside the shed was the bastard child of truck and an RV decked out in digital gray camo. It had the front end of a truck, but the back end was a compact camper, but it lacked the large windows and cab-over bed. The windshield and windows were covered with a metal meshwork that was large enough to see through easily but too small for more than two fingers to fit through it. The front was big enough to hold four passengers comfortably. I could see far enough into the back to see a small stove and sink on the driver’s side. Storage lined the rest of what I could see. I looked over at Bryce to see what his reaction was.

“Wow!” he said as he stepped inside. I took a couple of steps over to see that the other shed had the same thing in it. Since they looked the same, I followed Bryce in and opened the passenger side door. From the inside, I could see that the vehicle also had room in the back for four single beds stacked two to a side. The driver’s side seemed to be devoted to living arrangements, with the tiny stove and sink set over a small refrigerator, and the cabinets above and beside it devoted to pantry space. The largest door opened onto a toilet and a sink, then a tall, narrow door that opened onto a tiny closet. The passenger side was a mix of armory and survival gear, including a couple of tents and a folding table. The gun cabinet opened to reveal a rack that held two M-14s, two Ruger 10/22s and a pair of Remington 870 pump shotguns, with two M9s clipped to the door. Boxes of ammo were stacked in the bottom. Two drawers below that revealed cleaning kits and four knives. I smiled as I recognized the Aircrew Survival Egress Knife, or ASEK, that I had suggested to him instead of the usual Army M9 bayonet. The ASEK was a better utility knife, and for civilian survival, it would do the same job as the bayonet, only much better.

While Bryce and Cassie explored their vehicle, I went back to the other shed. Amy was in the back, and Maya had climbed into the front passenger seat. “Look, honey, it even has a laptop up front,” she said with a teasing smile.

“Great, I’ll be able to write another book,” I said.

“We should have grabbed some of our DVDs,” Amy said from in back.

“Guess we’ll have to stop at a Best Buy or something,” Maya answered. I left them to explore and went to the back of the vehicle, noting the emblem on the back that read “Land Master Edition”. There was a trailer hitch on the back and an extended storage deck. Karl and Porsche were waiting for me when I stepped out of the shed, neither of them looking happy.

“Where are we going exactly?” he demanded.

“To a place in southern Wyoming. Just west of Medicine Bow National Forest. Way off the beaten track, so there won’t be so many dead people walking around.”

“That’s a plus,” Porsche said. “So, what about all your stuff here? Seems like a lot to just leave behind.” To my amazement, Karl nodded in agreement with her.

“You’re right. We’re going to have to load up as much as we can tonight. There’s a trailer in the barn where we stored our food stock. We’ll get as much as we can in it, and stow the bikes on the back of the Land Masters.”

Cassie and I started up the Land Masters and pulled them out of the sheds, then we got the trailer hooked to the back of hers. I set half hour watches on the road, and we got to work. By ten o’clock, both vehicles were loaded and prepped. My shortwave radio ended up mounted in my Land Master, and the disassembled bike trailers ended up on the top racks. Finally, tired and sweaty, we all found ourselves gathered around the campfire with bottles of Heartland Ale for the adults and cups of soda in the hands of Amy and Bryce. Sherman was lying at Porsche’s feet and Leo had crawled up into the crook of my arm.

“You know what I’m going to miss?” Porsche said out of the blue. “Pizza.” That got a few murmurs of agreement, especially from me.

“Soda,” Bryce said, holding his cup up for emphasis.

“Mickey D’s fries,” Amy said.

“Breakfast cereal,” Cassie chimed in.

“Chocolate,” Maya said, and got a chorus of agreement.

“Ice,” was my contribution.

“Toilet paper,” Karl said. No one else said anything for a few moments as the depth of that one set in. Conversation picked back up a few minutes later, and more things we were going to miss came up, like the internet and hot showers. No one mentioned any of the people they were going to miss, and I didn’t think it was a good idea to bring that up just then. Things were still too raw to start dwelling on the dead.

“Welcome to the new social networking, folks,” I said as I gestured to the circle around the fire. “No more anonymous trolls, no more memes, just people talking. But, for us, it’s late. We’re going to have to get an early start in the morning.” Everyone got up and headed off in one of two directions. Amy and Bryce wandered toward the Land Masters with Karl and Cassie behind them.

“You guys mind if I sleep on your floor tonight still?” Porsche asked with her head down and her eyes averted.

“Of course you can,” Maya said with a smile, as if the answer was obvious. “I know that look. What are we going to be doing while everyone else is asleep?” she asked me after Porsche made it into the cabin. Any other night, it would have been filled with mischief and heat. Tonight, she sounded resigned.

“Planning our route. And listening to the airwaves. I get a funny feeling that I’m not going to like what I hear out there tonight.”

“It’s the zombie apocalypse honey,” she reminded me. “What’s to like?”

Truer words had rarely been spoken.

Chapter
13

The Color of Authority

No oppression is so heavy or lasting as that which is inflicted by the perversion and exorbitance of legal authority.
~ Joseph Addison ~

“It’s a lot worse than I thought,” I said as we all gathered around the Land Masters. “First, we have a new President, Gabriel Shaw, formerly known as the Secretary of Homeland Security. Secondly, President Shaw-”

“You mean Acting President Shaw,” Karl interrupted.

“He didn’t use that title,” I corrected. “And yes, I know my civics. He’s supposed to, but he’s calling himself the President. But that’s a minor thing compared to the rest.
President
Shaw has declared martial law, which I’m sure surprises everyone here. He’s also declared that all US citizens are to report to regional processing centers for relocation to Designated Safe Zones. According to the radio broadcasts we heard last night, it’s compulsory and failure to report is considered treason, and anyone who resists being rounded up for processing and relocation will be shot on sight. As an aside, looters will also be shot on sight.”

“Well, damn,” Cassie said drily. “There went my plans for the weekend.” That got a laugh out of everyone, and I was grateful for the lift in the mood.

“More than you might think,” I said as I looked around the group. “If we leave today, we’ll all be in danger. Our own government might try to kill us. We have the supplies to last here for about a year, maybe longer if we hunt and scavenge. But I don’t know if or when the infected will find us. What I do know is that they’re already following the survivors out of Springfield.” Everyone was quiet at that reminder, and I gathered my resolve for the next part. “As much as I hate to consider it, reporting for processing is still an option.”

“No,” Cassie said before I could continue. “For Bryce and me, that isn’t even an option. You know that, Dave.” She put an arm around Bryce’s shoulders, and I could feel the heat of her anger across the five feet that separated us. “If the rest of you want to turn yourselves in, fine. I’d rather take my chances with running.”

Porsche stepped forward with a grim look in her eyes. “No way. I’m not turning myself in.”

“I’m not either,” Maya said. “Not after what Dave told us.” She turned a cold glare on Karl.

“For once, we agree on something, if for completely different reasons,” he said as he raised his hands between them. It was half placating and half defense. “If DHS wants you for some reason, then they’ll use Amy to get to you. My daughter is not a bargaining chip.”

“Unless there’s money involved,” Maya spat.

“You’re one to talk,” Karl retorted.

“Mom! Dad!” Amy snapped. “Will you both please chill? God, you two are
so
immature. And by the way, I’m kinda right here, okay? And it’s my life too. Not that I want to get ‘processed’ or anything,” she turned to me. “I say we go, today.” With her outburst, I turned to Bryce, who’d remained silent throughout the discussion.

“Bryce, what do you want to do? Stay or go?” I asked him.

“It’s like Mom said,” he offered in a voice barely above a whisper. “They want us. The zombies aren’t the only ones who might come looking for us, are they?”

“Probably not,” I said. “But I’m not sure. The DHS and the military pulled out of Springfield the same night we bugged out. Homeland is likely to be looking for us, but the military might not be.”

“Then we’ll be like the mages in Night of Fire,” Bryce said, standing straighter. His voice lost the quiet tone, and he suddenly sounded much older. “They’ll look for us whether we hide or run. All we can choose now is whether to give them a moving target, or a stationary one. I aim to give them the one that’s harder to hit.” I smiled as he quoted my first book.

“Couldn’t have said it better myself,” I said. “So, who else says we go today?” Four adults raised their hands. Amy had already made her opinion known, but she raised her hand, too. It made her the fifth adult to raise her hand in my eyes.

“Okay, then. Saddle up.”

 

Karl ended up riding shotgun in Cassie’s truck, and Maya took her place up front with me. Porsche and Amy alternated between the passenger seats and wandering into the back as we drove. I had the built in CB radio set to channel twenty three, since it seemed the quietest at the moment, and my shortwave set to scan. During the day, when signal propagation was weakest, I wasn’t picking up much except on the military bands, and most of that was encrypted. We stayed on the smaller farm roads that paralleled US 44. The back roads kept us away from major groups of zombies, though we did run into a few. Well, run into is sort of an overstatement. We ran
over
a few. The Land Master’s heavy bumper made short work of them, and the undercarriage’s high clearance made sure we only felt a couple of bumps. But after the first ten miles, we ran into our first challenge. The road T’d ahead of us, the western route taking us right into Pleasant Hope, the right taking us miles out of our way before it turned north again. Instead of turning either way, I grabbed the pair of bolt cutters and got out of the truck. Tall grass rustled around my boots as I walked through it to the ancient, rusty barbed wire fence. With four quick snips, the wire pinged and coiled up on itself. We drove between the two fence posts and rambled across brown grass, angling toward a line of telephone poles that I was hoping led to the road on the other side of the field. Once we got across, all it took was another few snips, and we were rolling onto the road on the north side of the field and back on track. Our goal was to get north of Bolivar and take Highway 54 across Missouri 13, as close to midway between Springfield and Kansas City as we could get. On any other day, it would have been less than an hour’s drive up 13 Highway to get there. On two lane roads that never seemed to go in a straight line for more than a few miles, it took us almost four hours to cover what would have been about fifty miles on the highway.

A little after one, we pulled up behind a stand of trees that blocked easy view of the highway. Everyone piled out, eager to stretch their legs after hours on their asses. The Land Masters were big and comfortable, but they were still a little cramped, especially for two teenagers.

“Everyone stay between the trucks and the trees,” I called out.

“Ease up, Dave,” Karl said, his tone dismissive. “There’s no one around to see us.”

“And what if you’re wrong?” I asked as I headed for the sparse grass on the side of the road.

“Then we’ll see them coming from a long ways off,” he said, shaking his head. “And Maya says I have control issues.” Amy and Bryce were huddled in front of Maya and Porsche as they handed out sandwiches, bags of chips and the increasingly prized soda.

Cassie came up beside me, her hands on her hips as she tried to stretch her back out. “So, we cross the highway here and head for Kansas, right?” she said more than asked. I nodded and we headed for the edge of the trees. The road was empty and the air was still. There was quiet and then there was total silence, and we had the latter going on. Even the breeze seemed reluctant to get near the road.

“No cars on the road here,” I observed. “That’s good. If we can make it to Kansas, we should be able to make it to Nebraska or Colorado pretty easily, and from there, into Wyoming.”

“Not into Colorado. Everything from Fort Collins down to Castle Rock is one big city.” I looked at her and nodded, filing that part away. “I grew up in Boulder,” she said.

“Then I guess we’re heading up into Nebraska,” I said.

“Do you hear that?” Cassie asked as we turned to head back.

“No, I don’t hear an-” I started to say, then stopped as the low
whup-whup-whup
of rotor blades reached my ears. “Everyone down! Don’t move!” I yelled as I threw myself flat on the ground. I started counting, and when I got to thirty, a pair of Blackhawks flew overhead. For a moment, I was afraid we’d been spotted, but they didn’t turn around. Instead, they went maybe another mile down the road, then I could hear the steady pounding of a heavy gun. I risked standing up, and saw tracers streaking from the choppers to the ground as they circled something. Cassie and I sprinted back to the trucks and crouched next to everyone else.

“What are they doing?” Amy asked.

“Probably shooting at zombies,” I told her. I gave Karl a meaningful look, but he wasn’t impressed by me being right.

“Or survivors,” Porsche added. After a few minutes, the choppers moved on, leaving columns of smoke in their wake as they headed further north. Everyone moved when I did, and moments later we had the trucks started up and on the road again. For another half hour, we navigated over more two-lane asphalt, tracking as far north and south as we did west. Even in October, Missouri was green and beautiful, with most trees not showing their fall color yet. Since it was still in the first days of fall, it was warm enough for me to drive with the window down if I kept my sweatshirt on. And after the choppers had almost flown up on us, I wanted to be able to hear as much as I saw. The low hum of the engine and the hiss of the tires on the asphalt were the only sounds. The shortwave was set on scan, and it hadn’t been very active. Even the birds seemed to be wary of drawing attention to themselves. Amy had opted to sit on the floor so Sherman could press his nose against the wire grill of the passenger side rear window, while Porsche sat in the seat behind me. Maya was riding shotgun beside me. Only she was carrying a pistol instead of a scattergun. Of course, so was I. Everyone on board was armed, with Amy’s pink Ruger stashed behind her seat. My HK assault rifle was stashed behind my seat, sharing space with my survival tube.

We all jumped when the shortwave squawked. “Billy!” a high pitched male voice called out. “I got two big campers or somethin’ down on thirty-two, just past Wright Cemetery. Look pretty nice, and they got women with ‘em.”

“How many men?” another voice demanded. This one was deeper and more controlled, with less of the Missouri softening of his vowels.

“I only see one. I got ‘im in my sights. You want me to take him out?”

“Don’t be stupid. You’re not gonna hit a moving target at that kinda range. Walt’ll get ‘em at ninety-seven junction. You got that, Walt?”

“I got ‘em,” a voice I guessed was Walt’s answered.

“Fuck!” I spat as I grabbed the microphone for the CB and keyed it to transmit. “Cassie, stay close and don’t stop unless I do. We have some trouble heading our way.”

“Copy,” Cassie said. I stepped on the gas and felt the Land Master surge forward. The road sign said that the junction with Missouri 97 was about a mile ahead, and the truck hit sixty in nothing flat.

“Porsche, grab a shotgun from the gun cabinet and get it loaded. If we stop, Maya and I will cover the front, I want you to get out behind us and keep an eye on our six o’clock. Amy, put Sherman in the back and tie his leash off. If things go bad, you get behind the wheel and get the hell out, you got it?” I checked the rearview mirror in time to see her nod, her eyes wide and round. A few thugs wouldn’t have worried me, but they were using the police bands, which meant they’d probably show up in police
cars
and if they were broadcasting with a local police department’s tower, then odds were good they could be picked up by any decent radio direction finder in the western half of the state. Assholes with police equipment but no police training, I could handle. Trained troops in Blackhawks were a different story.

Maya pulled her pistol and worked the slide to chamber a round, and I followed suit, putting my knee against the wheel to free my right hand to pull the slide back on my Colt before I reholstered it. She pulled up the map on the laptop and stared at it for a moment. A slow, wolfish smile spread across her face and she turned to me.

“Take the left for Old Ninety-Seven Highway,” she said, pointing up ahead of me. I looked up ahead. The road curved to the right, but I could also see a smaller road that kept going straight. As the turn off got closer, I saw a police cruiser parked in the middle of the road with a man standing behind it. I braked and pulled the truck across the left lane and onto the gravel road that connected Highway 32 with 97. The Land Master rocked with the change in the road’s pitch and gravel crunched under the tires as I pulled the wheel hard to the right to make the dog-leg. The back end slewed out behind me and I hit the gas again, spraying gravel. Cassie pulled in behind me and closed the gap between us. Over the radio I could hear Walt screaming that we’d gotten past him and calling Billy and Jim to help him chase us down. I heard sirens behind us and saw flashing blue and red lights as we closed on 97. The truck skidded through the left turn, then we were speeding down 97. We took the first left and stayed on 97, headed for another small road that would take us south of Nevada. By the time we were turning west onto the road we wanted, I could see three of the white cruisers behind us, and they were gaining on Cassie’s truck. I keyed the mic again.

“Cassie, take the lead. Stay on E!” I called out as I pulled into the left lane. Her truck surged ahead when I hit the brakes again, then there was a police cruiser pulling up on my right. I saw the driver’s window start to roll down. Maya shifted her pistol to her left hand and fired through the mesh. The cruiser slowed enough to drop behind the windows, so I braked and swerved hard right. Metal screeched when I hit it, and the truck shuddered for a moment, then the cruiser was plowing through barbed wire fence. The moment I was in the right lane, the second cruiser sped past me and rocketed toward Cassie’s Land Master. The third cruiser swerved into the rear quarter panel on my side, but it simply didn’t have the mass to do more than make me swerve a little. I stomped on the gas and left it behind momentarily as I bore down on his partner. I caught up to him as he pulled even with Cassie and rammed his rear bumper hard enough to move him ahead of her. I hit him again and he made the mistake of trying to get out of my way. When I rammed him a third time, my front bumper clipped the left side of his bumper and he shot across to the right side of the road and started to spin out. Cassie dropped back and avoided him and we left him behind in a cloud of dust. The traffic over the radio was turning the air blue, and I was tempted to join them as I heard the sound I’d been dreading: rotors. I checked my outside rear view mirror and saw flashing lights and shadows on the road behind me. Then I felt the chop of rotor wash and saw a Blackhawk drop down in front of me. The big chopper turned sideways and I found myself staring into the barrels of a mini-gun.

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