Chapter 1
~Laguna Creek, Later that Day~
The room was relatively quiet, considering the fact that there were energy-ridden teenagers anxious to leave in a few seconds. Dani was staring at the clock, testing the old adage.
“God. Clocks really DO move slower when you watch them.”
Behind her, Kyo yawned ad raised his head. “Then stop—Stop looking at the clock, then.”
Dani glanced back at him, a bored expression on her face. “Novel concept, but not nearly as mu—”
The screech of the sirens cut off the rest of her statement, and silenced the part of the class that was talking. Drew’s head moved itself upwards tiredly.
“Again?” the question was a symbol of annoyance.
A voice crackled over the intercom, dulling the sirens into an annoying background noise. {
Laguna Creek. I apologize for the interruption and lockdown so close to bell, however, I ask for your cooperation until the matter is resolved. We will be attempting an evacuation through the tunnels. Those not required to participate in battle will be escorted off campus. Thank you- Have a nice day! }
Kyo grunted, “ That makes twice, today?”
Dani nodded, sighing, “Yup.”
Drew started to stand up, grabbing his backpack. “I say we leave now, befo—”
Kyo interrupted him, “’Leave,’ leave?”
The other teenaged male rolled his eyes, “No, I mean ‘stay here and drink tea,’ leave.”
Kyo stood up, “’Leave,’ leave, it is.”
The three pushed past a few students and towards the door, only to meet face-to-face with something that looked as if it had just stepped out of a Japanese Graphic Novel.
“Wait! Where are you kids going?” the man asked, looking as if they were somehow greatly offending him.
The three strode past him, Dani watching him as they went by. “We get to fight decaying things.”
The man’s eye twitched. Aware he was defeated by the implementation of “fighters” to protect the school in the case of an outbreak, he grumbled, “Alright, then.”
The door closed behind the adolescents, shutting out the sound of the sound of the teacher relaying evacuation procedure to the class. Drew eyed the door as they walked away. “If that was any easier, I would have laughed.”
The remark was overall ignored as Kyo, in the lead simply because he had made it out of the door first, led the small group around a few buildings, avoiding security easily as they were all preoccupied with other matters. They came to a halt in a relatively cut-off area between the library and the student store, checking that the coasts on both sides were clear before pressing themselves up against a wall to talk.
“I have this feeling we’ve forgotten something,” Kyo informed them. The other two blinked for a moment, feeling around in their pockets and testing the weight of their packs.
“Weapons,” It was Drew who said it out loud.
A unanimous “Shit” made itself heard and Drew sighed, pointing out across the campus. “There’s an armory over there that’s pretty easy to get into.”
Dani glanced at him, eyebrows raised. “You
would know that.”
“Lead the way.” Kyo waved the two forward.
They reached the building and Drew began his work on the door, fumbling with the lock and swearing at it a few times.
“Door hate you?” Dani smirked. Drew grumbled and stood back, kicking the door in. The fact that it caved quickly was proof as to the school’s lack of funding where it might have actually been needed.
Kyo flipped the light switch as he walked in, striding all the way across the room towards the hand weapons, and the other two moved towards melee weapons and long range. Dani scanned the short-range weapons and lifted a titanium crowbar, weighing it in her hands and then searching for a rope to secure it to her belt with. Drew grabbed a Smith ‘n Wesson rifle, pocketing a relatively large case of .45 rounds and inserting the ammunition into his backpack.
“They need exploding hand pies,” Kyo stated, turning over a Berretta handgun. The other two froze, puzzled, and stared at him for a moment, before starting the instinctive transition around the room. Drew glanced at Kyo as he walked by.
“Yeah . . . Just grab
real guns this time, Kyo.”
Kyo flattened his expression, “Hey, that only happened once.”
They were halfway out the door when Kyo turned around and turned the light back on, “My collar is in here.”
“How can you tell?” Drew asked, turning around to watch Kyo walk across the room.
The other boy shrugged as he reached the crate full of blank collars. “I don’t know. Just can.”
Dani still stood outside the door, watching the campus. She glanced over her shoulder. “Hey, could you grab mine, too?” The answer that came back to her was a yes.
Drew began to look impatient after awhile, raising his voice so it would carry a little bit farther across the room. “Why can’t you just grab one?”
Kyo glanced back at Drew, picking up one of the collars and sticking it in the bag he was using. “No way. You never know what DNA could be on those. I don’t want a repeat of when Twenty tried to use Six’s collar."
Drew blinked. “What?”
Dani held the door open, waiting for the others to come through. “It’s a long story,” she assured him.
~Harriet Eddy Middle School~
Jack took a breath and stood up, moving to the door before anyone decided to yank her up and out of her seat. The alarm at the school had just faded to a dull background noise in order for teachers to be heard, and most of the kids seemed to be rather edgy.
She had almost made it halfway across the room when the substitute brought her to a halt.
“Excuse me, miss, but where are you going?”
Jack replied, “I have to pee.” The statement technically was not a lie.
The substitute looked taken aback for a moment, hearing the phrase put so bluntly. “I cannot just let you leave, miss. We’ve just entered a lockdown.”
Jack blinked a few times. “I’m a fighter.”
The substitute was clearly skeptical. “You look a little . . . small.”
Jack bared her teeth, exposing her sharp canines. The points told the teacher everything she needed to know.
“Well, well, well,” the substitute smiled, stepping out of the way. “You get your butt out there, then, kiddo.”
Jack made her way across the campus, headed for the part of the fencing that would get her to Laguna Creek in the least amount of time. It had been reported earlier that most of the ghouls seemed to be swarming upon that school. The idea of facing hundreds of the cadavers at once almost turned her towards home, or into the tunnels with the rest of her classmates.
She ducked into a box of collars and quickly found hers, slipping it over her head with a look of pain on her face before it even hit her shoulders. A tiger replaced her within seconds, crouched low and ready to spring over the fence.
The Bengal tiger hit the ground on the other side of the fence, charging down Seasons Drive.
~Laguna Creek High School~
“Which exit are we taking?” Kyo asked, pushing back his hair as he walked.
“Southeast,” came the reply. Drew fingered his revolver and glanced out through the fences as they approached.
“We’re gonna have a problem with that fence,” Kyo pointed out, casting a sideways glance at Dani and Drew.
Drew made a face. “Uh, yeah . . . about that. I was thinking maybe we could just jump it.”
“That’d be a little death-defying,” Kyo commented, appearing to accept the other boy’s sarcastic remark as the plan.
Dani blinked and raised her hand, trying to ignore the buzzing coming from the fence. The thought of 300 milliamperes of electricity coursing through anyone’s body did not appeal to her. “I vote towards not dying. Or ending up seriously injured. Please.”
A momentary silence was broken by a garbled shout from elsewhere along the fence line. Dani furrowed her brow in an effort to understand it.
“They’re throwing a charge,” she translated, glancing back at the other two as if for confirmation that the newest option was their means of leaving the campus.
The three moved partway across a grassy area for a better look at the gate in question. A horde of undead was approaching it, albeit slowly, and with each step they took, more of the kids in the back stepped farther backwards.
“We’re counting three! ONE!” The kids in the middle froze, trying to comprehend what they were about to do.
“Well?”
“That’s out way out,” Kyo decided, before anyone else could say anything. He started dashing towards the gates to joint he others.
“TWO!” Someone screamed and broke away from the larger group, running back to wards a classroom.
“This would have been useful earlier!” Drew managed to make himself head over the final count and the incessant moaning.
“THREE!”
The three made a mad dash to get lost in the chaos as the gates opened and bodies collided, gunshots filling the air. They dodged and shoved their way through both those alive and dead.
Starting to turn a corner, Drew turned around. “Just a second.”
Kyo leaned against a tree and Dani took her time to catch her breath, watching as the third teen drew his magnum, aiming the rifle back towards the mob. He fired off a single shot, nailing the closest ghoul through the back of the head. He replaced the gun, nodding once and casting a slight grin at his kill. “
Now we can go.”
~En Route Laguna Creek~
Jack’s paws beat steadily on the pavement, taking her down the streets far faster than any human could run. She was drawing closer to her destination, enough so that, over the dull roar of wind and cars, she could hear the gunshots.
She slowly came to a stop when she turned a corner. There was one large figure surrounded by three much, much smaller ones. Squinting and taking another few steps forward, she realized what it was.
An incredibly obese undead was being beaten by three roughly normal-sized humans. The three attempting to bring down the large creature had their work cut out for them, it seemed. Judging by the lack of firearms present, either the group simply did not have any ballistic weapons or they were trying to bring the ghoul down as silently as possible. The Bengal tiger took a moment attempting to decide what to do. It was a no-brainer, in all reality. Better to get rid of it, before she had to see it, or anything it would inevitable bite if left to live.
“Holy fuck!”
Dani leapt backwards as a large cat suddenly came barreling down the street, launching upwards a few feet from the oversized ghoul and knocked it over, tearing into the beast in a flurry of both fur and decay.
The tiger stood staring at the immobilized ghoul for a moment longer before flicking its tail in finality. It lifted its head and turned, walking toward the three teenagers, opening its mouth as if saying “hi.”
Kyo blinked at the rather large cat as Dani stared at it as if trying to place where she had seen the tiger before.
“Hey, see?” He crouched down and reached out towards the collar on its neck. “El-Thirteen.”
“Hrm!” Drew cleared his throat loudly and gestured towards a nearby gate. “I’d rather
not be eaten right now.”
Kyo stood up. “Right.”
Drew jumped the nearby fence, using the nearby tree to gain leverage. Opening the gate from the inside, he waved his arm as if that would make everyone else move both more quickly and quietly. He stepped backwards a bit to let the tiger through, watching it as if he did not entirely believe that there was a human behind the bright green eyes.
Kyo crouched down again and went about unlatching the collar, slipping it off of the head of the Bengal. The tiger stood glaring at him, but it did not make a move as bones began to crunch and for recede behind strawberry-blonde hair and somewhat baggy clothing, borrowed off of a brother. The girl standing there raised her eyebrows before setting them back into a flat position. She glanced at Dani, who grinned. “Jack! Glad you could make it.”
Jack rolled her eyes. “Try recognizing me next time.”
Kyo looked vaguely intrigued. “You’re Jack? Hey, thanks for that, back, with the head smashing. Yeah.”
Drew nodded slightly, but he seemed eager to get somewhere that was not as exposed as where they were right now. “Come on. We need to get moving.”
“Where?” The question belonged to Jack.
“I know a place, alright?”
Jack glanced at Dani, who shrugged and moved towards the gate. “Let’s go, then.”
The group had almost reached the edge f the wooden enclosure when an infernal groan sounded from the other side of the fence. The four stopped almost immediately.
“That’s . . . Not good . . .” Kyo muttered. He was answered by the arrhythmic pounding of at least three sets of ungainly hands beating against the gate.
Drew looked around, retreating around a corner to the very back of the house. "We need to get outta here . . .," He told himself, wondering if everyone would be able to make it over the fence that stood to their backs.
"Er . . .to where?" Jack had apparently heard him.
The pounding halted for a moment before the wind changed again. There was another moan and the beating continued.
Dani opened and closed her hand nervously. "We need to get moving. Like,
now.
Before we're zed f—"
There was a
snap as both hinges and wood broke, followed by the rattle that always seemed to come with falling wood. Another
thudtold the group of teenagers that at least one of the undead had hit the ground, trampled by the others and tripped by its own lack of knowledge as to the fact that there was wood in the way of its dragging feet.
Four walking dead rounded the corner, in a slow-motion race to get to the group of humans first.
"Aw, cock it!" Drew breathed, pulling out his rifle and taking aim just in time for Kyo to shoot his target with one of his 9 millimeters. Drew could not help but snicker sadistically at the brain splatter.
Not seeing the point of pulling a longer-range weapon in a close quarters situation, Dani pulled out her crowbar and vented years of anger into the skull of the nearest ghoul, bludgeoning it to the ground and kicking its battered skull just to make sure it was dead. She panted and turned around, drawing her Glock for her second target.
Jack grabbed her collar back form Kyo and slammed it over her head, shifting as quickly as possible and tackling another ghoul, tearing into its neck with her claws and getting ready to smash the connection between head and body. Dani stepped up to finish the job with a bullet to the head.
The tiger lowered its head and stood up in full human form. As she turned, the last ghoul caught her from behind, pulling her in towards an open mouth. She closed her eyes, bracing herself against the ghoul's pull when suddenly she fell forward, covered from behind with brain matter and bits of hair and skull.
Drew sneered, holstering his rifle, "Hah. Stupid maggot-faced walkers. Didn't stand a chance in HELL."
Jack glared at him, “You could have hit me!”
Drew arched his eyebrows, still enjoying the gore. “Well . . . I didn’t.”
“I think now would be a good time to leave,” Dani suggested, attempting to avoid a fight.
“Anyone happen to have a plan?” Kyo inquired, strapping his 2 9-millimeters into their respective holsters.
Drew looked thoughtful for a moment, and opened his mouth to comment when Jack cut him off.
“There’s a house for sale down the street- two stories. If we just kill the stairway, we should be alright.”
Kyo stroked his chin. “Yeah, or there’s always the pie eatery.” Jack glared at him.
Drew held up a hand. “No, that’s a good i—hey, how about the apartments over by Wackford?”
“You mean where Wackford
used to be,” Kyo corrected, crossing his arms. “And how is that any better than the house or the pie store?”
“Anything is better than the pie store, Kyo,” Jack informed him.
Kyo rolled his eyes. “Yeah, but look at it this way. We’ll never go hungry.”
Dani glanced at him, “Yeah, but neither will the zed.”
Drew shook his head slightly, “Enough about the pie for a second.” He waited for all the eyes to be on him. “I figure, first off, that the stairs will be easier to break down than those in any house. Give Kyo here a skill saw and they’ll be down in half a second.”
Jack nodded slightly. She had rather liked her idea but the logic made sense. Dani chuckled.
“And then there’s the wall. It’ll give us a little bit of time and some extra defense against the walkers on the outside.”
“Okay. Then what about food?” The question, unsurprisingly, came from Kyo.
“Well, there’s the Albertson’s right across the street. Once we get set up we’ll be able to raid the store. And up until the power’s out we should be able to get perishables, too.”
Jack looked somewhat pleased, “Okay. And until the power’s out?”
Drew thought for a moment. “There’s an alarm system and heating and air. And a fridge.”
Dani grinned slightly. “Sounds like a catch, then.”
Drew nodded. “And I’ve got a friend who lives next door to the place we’re looking at. Uh...Ed. He’s in the Ee Gee Special Tactics and Biohazard Response Team.”
There was a look of surprised relief. The E.G.S.T.B.R.T. was a section of a statewide defense core against outbreaks just like these. If anyone was the best person to be nearby during an outbreak, it would be this friend of Drew’s.
“Then let’s go,” Kyo said, walking towards the battered fencing. Everyone else followed without a word. Now that they had somewhere to go, they wanted to get there.
The owner of the house threw a dish into the sink and took a double take of the window. He grunted and shoved it open. “Get the hell outta my backyard, damned kids!”
The shortest of them, a girl with brown hair, glanced at him, snaring and pulling a bloodied crowbar off of her belt.
The house owner widened his eyes and retreated into the house, muttering about “Kids these days, no respect for their elders.”
~En Route apartment complex~
The group walked in relative silence most of the trek toward the apartment complex before Jack spoke up. “Why aren’t we raiding the stores now?” She figured it might save them time.
As if in answer to her question, an S.U.V. shot out of the side road in front of the group and barrel rolled across the center divide, smashing into a sedan on the other side of the street, bringing an immense amount of pain and death to four screaming passengers and the three undead clinging to the roof.
Jack’s eyes widened slightly, “… Ah.”
Dani could not take her eyes off of the wreck, “If I didn’t know any better,” she started, “I would’ve thought those zed were enjoying themselves.”
Kyo grinned, “The ride of their afterlives.”
Drew chuckled.
Moments later, they found themselves hidden from the street by a curtain of overhanging branches. Even through the foliage, two people bleeding from crushed, teeth-marked limbs managed to spot the group, pleading for help. Kyo, drawing his eyes level with the two, abruptly took a very serious body expression, drawing one of his two nine millimeters and, before either one had the chance to think, he had shot both of the bite victims down.
“Sorry . . .,” he mumbled, then turning and firing through the branches. Four undead came into view as they hit the ground.
Dani, Jack, and Drew all stared for a moment.
“Whoa,” Came the unified response.
They stepped out of the overhang, now in full view of the apartment complex ahead and the shopping center across from it. The entire area was in chaos. Smoke drifted through the air, disrupted by moans and yells from the still living. Occasionally a gunshot went off.
The brave owners of the few houses left along Bruceville were defending the dead, weed-covered land adjacent to the apartment complex, though to little avail. Standing alongside the brick wall outside the apartments were what looked to be a dozen undead. They stood, staring into nothingness, aware neither of themselves nor of the pandemonium around them.
Someone whooped and the four found themselves sprinting towards the horde, guns drawn where possible. Kyo caught the ghouls’ attention.
“HEY YOU! Hey! Look at me when I’m talking to you! Yeah!”
Dani stopped when she ran out of breath and aimed her Glock, closing her right eyes and managing a shot into the cheekbone of the closest ghoul.
Drew leapt forward, right into the middle of the group, and brained one with his trench spike, pulling out and turning to handle another just as it reached out to grab his shoulder.
Kyo unsheathed his katana and went about dealing with the three nearest him, kicking one out of the way.
Jack threw on her collar and pounced, bringing down a few of her own and making sure the last fallen really were dead.
Making her way over to assist, Dani found herself suddenly surrounded. Panicked, she yelled, “Kyo! Collar. NOW!” The back of her head wondered why he had her transformation collar.
Kyo blinked, looking around as the ghoul he had been holding off grabbed his wrist. “Wha?”
“THROW THE FUCKING COLLAR!”
“Collar! Right!” He reached into the bag by his side and whipped out the heavy piece of metal, cracking the ghoul that had grabbed him over the head with the device as he did so, sending the undead sprawling.
Drew turned and aimed carefully at one of the last remaining undead, managing both a clean hit through the skull and missing Dani, just as the collar landed with an uneven thud on her shoulders. Jack tackled one of the others to the ground as Dani lunged in a flash of fur at the undead behind her, clawing open the rib cage and working her way up the neck in a panic, trying to get through the necrotic muscle tissue so that she could sever the neck properly.
Preparing her tongue over the back of her mouth so that she would not swallow, she bit down hard on the back of the neck, shattering the vertebrae in one concentrated position. She shook herself out and backed away as a shot fired through the head to finish the corpse off. Dani spat out the dead flesh and allowed herself a moment to catch her breath.
Drew approached the corner as Dani removed her collar. He peered down Di Lusso Drive, assessing the situation before glancing back at the others and called them over. “There are less walkers over here.” It was a good choice, or at least one better than trying to get in at the gate on Bruceville, as the main opening seemed to be plagued with a decently smaller number of ghouls.
The tallest started to open the door, only to find it locked. Drew grumbled and stepped back, getting ready to jump the fence. Jack beat him to it, leaping over the wall and switching back to her human form behind the brick before reappearing at the gate. She opened the pedestrian door and closed it when everyone had gone through, checking it through the bars to make sure it was still locked.
Not pausing nor looking back, Drew began to explain their destination. “We’re looking at a second story flat.”
“We’re sure it’s vacant?” Kyo inquired as the group passed the somewhat over-decorated rental office.
Drew led them up the stairs to apartment 7-C. “There’s nobody here. Trust me.” He went to work on the knob with a few randomly selected picking tools. The group was silent, straining to hear the faint clicks over the background noise that was the rest of the world.
Drew turned the knob, and the door swung open, revealing the relatively spacious three-room apartment. Off to one side a sliding-glass door opened to a rather miniscule balcony. The kitchen seemed to draw most of the attention, with the couch a close second. It almost looked as if the tenants had just left earlier that day.
Kyo walked over to the kitchen as Drew mentioned something about an attic, opening the fridge. “Hey look. Stale pie,” He said, lifting the tin off of the middle shelf. Dani rolled her eyes, leaning against the couch and in the process of catching her breath, “Please, don’t eat that,” she panted, sounding rather like her own mother.
Kyo tossed the pastry back into the refrigerator and shut the door. “Yes, Mom,” he managed to say, before a box of equally old doughnuts collided with his head.
Jack made a point of pointing to Dani as if the shorter girl had thrown them, when, clearly confused, she had not.
“Hey, where’d Drew go?”
Everyone else shrugged, and ignored the problem for a moment as they started to look through the kitchen and the front room a bit.
It was not long until Drew reappeared, a spyglass in hand. “I’m goin’ to the roof,” He said, closing the door behind him.
There were a few thuds from outside and Kyo popped the last part of a doughnut into his mouth.
“It’s like we’re all roommates.”
~Sacramento Government Building. May 2004~
At an average height, with nondescript brown eyes and hair, The man shuffling down the corridor was not the first one would expect to slide a high-entry card key into the slot of Lab 204, however Redford defied his average looks with his above-average intelligence and organizational ability.
He pushed the clipboard into the crook of his elbow and slid the key into the lock, waiting for confirmation that he could still enter the restricted room, and stepped inside.
The Lab aide inside looked up from his work. “Good morning.”
Tell me what’s good about it and we’ll talk,” Redford muttered, sipping his coffee. He eyed the being inside the containment chamber that filled the center of the room over the edge of the mug. “Update?”
The intern straightened up and fully faced his superior to give him the news. “I have yet to be able to attach reading tools to him today. He’s been a little too skittish.”
Redford snorted into his cup. “Skittish” was not exactly the word he would have chosen. “Body condition?” He did not press the issue of the reading tools, as he had not expected mush else.
“Showing minor decomp in right hand. Looks like he had carpal tunnel syndrome when he was alive,” The aide said, turning back and glancing at the creature as it ran itself into the wall a few more times, There was a sickening crack and the intern sighed, typing something into the computer. “And now he’s got a broken arm.”
Redford nodded absently, staring at what had once been a human. He could remember interviewing this one. The meetings he had with the humans to be tested sickened him. He found it incredibly hard to believe that anyone would willingly become one of the monsters like the one before him, and yet he saw more and more coming in as depression and various ailments drained the human’s mental capacities, They came in in response to the ads. Most did not have any family to keep them from going through with their decision. Others were just lost and looking for meaning. Still more even found the concept appealing.
Redford turned and began to leave the room, “Try to hook it up to a scanner before you feed it again. After that, bring it to the stables. We’ll be needing him for the next group of Lycans coming in.”
Redford turned a corner, finding himself face-to-face with the cocky form of Johnathan. He cleared his throat and tried to step around his co-worker. “Hullo, Johnny.” He grumbled.
The younger man held out his arm to stop Redford’s progress. “Haven’t seen you in training for awhile, Hawkeye. What’s taking so long? Busy?”
“They’re rebuilding my collar,” Redford grunted, pushing Johnny out of the way.
Johnathan stroked his chin. “Ah, that’s right . . .How did it break again? You ran it over, right?”
Redford did not look back. The smirking face of Johnathan was not what he wanted to see. After all, violence was not allowed in the workplace. “You know
very well how it broke, Johnathan.”
“You know, for someone so intelligent, you sure are rather clumsy.” Johnathan let the silence sink in for a moment, mocking Redford with his facial expressions and body movement. He turned to walk the other way. “Oh, by the way. Dagda says he wants to see you.”
Redford glared at the wall across form him for a moment, listening to Johnathan’s footsteps disappearing down the hall. He clenched his clipboard tightly and strode towards the office of another coworker, head of a separate department, one Josef Dagda.
He was the man with the temper, or at least the one that seemed to boil most easily. He glanced at the clock and drummed his fingers over the desk, grumbling to himself, “Where in the hell is he?” In answer, a sharp knock struck the door, ringing through the air. “Come in!” the man snapped, trying to reel himself in from the edge of his patience.
Redford nodded politely as he entered. “Good morning, Mister Dagda. You wanted to see me?”
Josef Dagda skipped the pleasantries; “My team believes they’ve found the answer to one of the kinks in your virus.”
“They do?” Redford’s eyebrows arched in amazement. They had been having trouble with progression for a while now; long enough that the government was threatening to pull their funding out from under them.
“Indeed. The one who finally figured it out is a sharp tack, too, Redford. You’d like her, I think. You go down to section See-Seven, ask for Rais. She’ll fill you in.”
Redford had an extreme look of relief on his face. “I’ll be there straight away, sir.”
~Apartment Complex, Present~
Drew walked into the front room, placing the cap over two new AA batteries he had just placed into one of the pair of 2-way radios he had found in a closet. He looked up at the group, tossing one up and down a few times. “Alright. Last check, things were cooling down a little bit, at least in the shopping center.” He was aware of the fact that, given the chaos that had unleashed itself there earlier, that did not mean much. “Except…”
“Except?” Kyo asked from his place on the easy chair.
“Well… Just judging by the number of walkers we had to face on the way in here… We aren’t going to have nearly enough supplies for the weapons.”
“Multiple stops, then?” Jack asked. There was a general groan. That would make everything that much harder.
Dani spoke from her place on the counter, “Jack, you didn’t grab weapons back at school, did you?” She had not seen anything attached anywhere on her friend, but that did not mean much, she knew.
The taller girl shook her head. “I guess I’m going, then, so I can get something I’ll be able to use.”
Dani grunted slightly, “I think I’ll stay. At this rate I’m never gonna recover.” She still managed to be breathing heavily from the earlier exertion.
Drew nodded and tossed her one of the hand radios, “I’ve got both of these set on channel four, My friend Ed, if you need him, is on six. I’d stay clear of seven, that’s the police channel. We wanna keep in touch, though, just in case.”
Dani turned the device over a few times, looking at it. She tested the “Talk” button and heard her voice come out the other end. “Right, then.
Drew, Kyo, and Jack closed the door behind themselves, dropping themselves over the edge, where the stairs had been earlier. Dani, meanwhile, attached the radio to her belt and moved toward the bedrooms, looking for ways to make their shelter a little more zed-proof.
Drew dropped from the wall into the mostly empty lot, followed by Kyo. The area was splattered with blood and bits of flesh, as well as a few broken weapons. Jack, having taken the form of the Bengal again, landed soon after with a measure of grace unexpected form either an animal so large as a tiger, nor Jack herself.
Kyo took a good look across the street. “I say we hit Albertson’s, first.” The name had changed somewhat recently, to Save Mart, though heaven itself only knew how many people actually called it that.
Drew nodded. “While we still have daylight, then.”
Jack padded behind the two humans as they stole across the street and through the parking lot. Everything seemed rather quiet, especially considering what had broken out earlier. A few car alarms were dying in overturned or otherwise battered vehicles. Blood trickled along grooves in the asphalt.
Drew paused at one of the wrecks as the other two kept walking ahead, gazing silently at one of the bodies. “… I thought you’d make it out …,” he murmured, before turning, and with one last glance, continuing on.
Drew jogged long enough to catch up with the other two, who were jumping and waving at the sensor bar on the door in a frail attempt to both get it open and ass the time until Drew caught up with them.
Kyo waved at it again before looking around. “Hang on a sec… I’ll go get something to smash it with . . .”
“Wait a sec,” Drew held up the hand signal for “halt.” “Never mind that.” He slid the brass knuckles over his hand, and pulled the trench spike from its sheathe. He slid the sturdy piece of metal into the rubber that protected the twin doors, and braced himself before he began to pry into them. He glanced at Kyo, slightly annoyed when he did not do anything at first. “Give me a hand with this?”
The blonde boy grabbed the door opposite drew and pulled. Between he two of them, they managed to break the doors into an open position.
“Okay. I’ll go to the pharmacy and get some first aid kits and medicine and stuff...You guys go get food,” Drew decided, already starting off. Kyo called him to a halt.
“Jack, you smell any in here?”
The tiger lowered her head for an immediate area search, and then broadened it by raising her head. Air currents naturally would throw off the guesstimate, but it was better than nothing. She carved a number into the floor with one of her index claws.
“So that’s, at least one walker. Maybe more. Keep an eye out.”
Drew jogged to the pharmacy and vaulted over the counter, right past the mangled corpse leaning across it. He could not help but stare for a moment, inwardly mortified. “Gross . . .” he muttered, finally tearing himself away and disappearing between the aisles of medicines.
Nearly all the way across the store, Kyo and Jack had started in the fruits section. They would be able to hold on to a few fresh fruits for maybe a week, if they were lucky, so they naturally jumped at the chance. Most of the load seemed to go into one of the packs that had been harnessed onto Jack’s back via quite a bit of rope, which annoyed her somewhat, though she was not able to say anything.
Trotting down one of the later aisles, Kyo glanced at a large bottle of some sort of energy drink. Jack raised an eyebrow at him, and he shrugged, tossing it into his own open sack, “For when we really run out of energy.” Jack rolled her eyes and went around the corner of the aisle to look at some canned food on display there.
Kyo reached up for a bottle of V8- because Dani had mentioned it at some point, he vaguely remembered- and in the process of bringing it down from the top shelf managed to knock over a Boom Box that managed to be on the top shelf. It crashed to the floor with a nerve-wracking bang, and almost immediately blared, “IT’S PEANUT BUTTER JELLY TIME, PEANUT BUTTER JELLY TIME!!”
Jack darted back around the corner and did not hesitate to smash the portable radio to bits.
Drew froze as one of the moans that had come in response to the mishap across the store sounded in the aisle behind him, and another came from over at the pharmacy’s counter. “Shit,” he said, under his breath. He turned around in time to see the grisly form of a pharmacist that had managed to get on his bad side stumbled around the turn.
“You!” Drew growled, springing forward and kicking the undead’s feet out from under it, before backing up and drawing his revolver to finish it off. He grazed the head, but the impact of the bullet behind the head managed to finish it off anyway.
The mangled pharmacist from before, however, was having a rather successful time climbing over the counter. Before it had its chance to collapse into a heap on the floor outside of the pharmacy itself, Drew shot it, as well. “Shoulda stayed dead!” He taunted the corpse. It collapsed into its heap on the ground and twitched as the electricity left its system for the second and last time.
The human decided that by now it was no time to waste time. Zipping up his bag, he made a beeline for the door.
The two walking dead came around separate ends of the aisle, one toward Kyo, and one to Jack. The tiger spun on the spot and pounced, crushing through the vertebrae in the neck and then slicing through the remaining tissue. The movement was fast enough that by the time Kyo had backed up far enough that he could effectively shoot the ghoul in front of him, she had already thrown the head across the aisle. It sailed through the air and accidentally took the undead assailing Kyo off of its feet. The human took a breath of slight relief and aimed one of his Berettas at the body, shooting it twice in the head, then doing the same with the dismembered head.
They too headed straight for the door, where they met up with Drew.
The group headed out into the lot and parked themselves behind an abandoned car, taking a moment to breathe and calm their nerves.
~Apartment Complex~
Dani was dragging her second mattress into the room she had decided was closest to the center of the building, as had just begun to lean it over the gaping hole that was a window when her cell phone rang. Startled, she flipped it open.
“Yo,” she answered.
“You have detention today, kiddo?”
“Not today, Dad,” Dani switched hands and started to manipulate the mattress so that it covered the window more effectively.
“Where are you, then?”
Dani stuck her tongue between her teeth and heaved, forgetting she was on the phone for a moment.
“Dani?”
“Sorry. Got distracted. I’m, uh, out with some friends.” She cleared her throat. “Jack, Drew, Kyo.” She knew her dad would not react very well to the mention of the boys at the end of that comment. “We’re over in the Target area, lotsa people. I’ll be home before dark, alright?” She stuck her head into the hallway and saw how far down the sun had fallen since she had last checked.
Her father did not say anything for a moment, before his voice brightened. “Well, don’t get your arm bitten off, alright?”
Dani laughed. “I’ll be fine. It’s not like I’m walking alone. It’s the cat I’d worry about.”
There was a chuckle from the other end. “I’ll talk to you tomorrow, then.”
“Love.”
“Love.”
Dani clicked off the phone and clicked it back onto her belt, next to the two-way radio. She leaned against the mattress, happy for the momentary muffling of the groans coming from just beyond the wall. She fiddled with the dial until she hit channel seven. She paused, hearing the broken police chatter. Careful not to hit the talk button, she entered a random burst of paranoia and brought the speaker up to her ear, turning the volume down until she was comfortable enough to be sure that nobody- or thing, would be able to hear it.
~“
—Ll sides. Looks like the entire area’s pretty well banged up. Think we should call an evac t’morrow? Try’n have out maybe by next week?”
“
Maybe. Ain’t our place to say, anyhow. Call for backup. Right now we’re trying to prize a few officers outta San-Fran—”
“
Only way they’ll all come out is if we promise to strip for ‘em.{/font]”
“[font=sydnie]Heh. Anyway, Galt and Sac say they’re on their way.”~
Dani clicked back to frequency number four; half expecting to hear one of the three that had gone out say something.
After a moment of screwing her head back into place, Dani picked up her phone and dialed her Mom’s house, hoping all the while that she would not pick up.
The other end rung one . . . two . . . three times before it clicked to the answering machine. Dani mouthed the words as they were cited, and proceeded to wait for the beep, as instructed by the voice on the other end.
“Hey, mom. Calling to ask if you’ve seen the news? They’re calling an evac tomorrow. Hey, I won’t be able to get home tonight. Do me a favor and get yourself, Dirk, and Pops plane tickets to anywhere. Preferably... like, out of the country? It all makes sense. Try to leave sometime today or early morrow. I’ll be alright- I’m with people who know what they’re doing. Just, do me the favor and get out. I love you. Kick Dirk for me, love the cats. Kick the puppy, too. Give Dad a hug, if you’re not still mad at him. Maybe go see Leeann? Anyway… rambling. Love, call me when you get there… even though I prolly won’t answer . . . Yeah . . . Love. Talk to you… later.” A short pause lingered before she hung up the phone.
As she moved to check on the running bathtub, Dani had the sinking feeling that the rest of the day would be very long, indeed.
~Save Mart Parking Lot~
Drew stood up, catching his breath. He had decided that the adrenaline was a good thing. As long as they kept moving, they would be able to make it in time. He was worried, though, because as he glanced up over the rooftops and saw the sun sinking behind them, he knew that the group was not likely to make it back to the apartments before dark.
“Come on…” he muttered, starting to move away and in the direction of the Big 5 that he knew carried ammunition and a small amount of general hunting gear.
They had made nearly all the way across the parking lot when a mass of black helicopters flew overhead.
“The heck?” Kyo blinked, tilting his head. “Where d’ya think they’re goin’?”
Drew shrugged. “Dunno. They’re really hauling it out for this one, though.”
The three made their way down the streets, trying for as much silence as possible while still moving fast enough to get where they were going before nightfall.
Jack growled, calling the attention of the other two as the wind shifted slightly. Sure they were both looking at her, she nodded down the street, making a low sound that somewhat resembled the compound word, “a lot.”
Drew and Kyo did not have to wait long to translate what she had said. Around the corner came a lone ghoul, and as the wind shifted yet again, it let out a low moan. Drew and Kyo pulled off an echo swear. The walker that had seen them began its uncoordinated gait towards the group.
In response, Drew shot off of the road, trying to break contact with the ghoul. The other two followed him almost immediately, Jack having to shove off her collar to ensure that she would fit in the bushes between the sidewalk and the brick wall.
Drew craned his neck around to peer through a gap in the bushes, assessing the situation as even more ghouls shambled into sight, drawn by the call of the first to have spotted the teenagers. He, and, he assumed, Kyo and Jack, did not want to deal with the undead at this moment in time. It was getting too late, and their nerves were already almost shot.
“We need a way around those guys,” Kyo pointed out the obvious as he looked past Drew.
There was silence, save for the low rumble from the walking dead that rendered the three unable to think clearly for several moments. Moments that stretched far too long. Finally, Jack spoke, pointing to the top of the wall she sat next to. “We should be able to walk along the brick walls there,” she said, half-whispering.
No sooner had the words left her mouth than there was a shriek from just behind the wall. The three of them winced. The sound had been just one more thing to draw the undead towards their location.
Drew’s brow furrowed in worry. “We need a distraction . . .,” he muttered.
Kyo glanced at Jack, as if to ask whether or not she had a suggestion. She opened her mouth, and had just barely begun to speak when a familiar-looking S.U.V. plowed through the crowd of ghouls. Aroused by the new, much livelier sound, the crowd attempted a rather complicated u-turn, and shambled after this new bait.
Jack wasted no time slamming her collar onto her shoulders, and the group took a simultaneous breath of air, as if diving into water, and leapt out into the road, taking off, as quietly as possible, down the street.
As the three finally drew closer to the building, the shattered glass and strewn bodies that littered the parking lot and front of all, but especially this store, came into sharp focus. There was a silent pause for a moment’s time before the three drew themselves back up to height and picked their way through the mess.
What was left of the doors in the facility hung limp on their hinges, swinging with the faint breeze, a fading echo of what had been here before.
Drew, able to push past the emotions of the place first, stepped inside, glancing around to make sure the coast was clear.
“Okay,” he said, finally, “Kyo, look for something . . . useful, like, food or, something.”
Kyo nodded slightly and pushed through the turnstile, off into the scattered racks of clothing. The Bengal tiger leapt over the counter and bounded towards the back of the room.
Drew nearly vaulted over the weapons counter, searching out the proper ammunition, silently thanking the fact that most of the group seemed to be partial to the nine-millimeter rounds. He knew that the tendency would save a lot of space, especially if they had to get up and leave their safe house one day. He scanned over the weapons, vaguely wondered why Dani had only grabbed handguns, and then half-wondered what Jack would prefer, so that he would know the right ammo to get. And then, as his eyes crossed a formidable-looking rifle, he remembered with a grin that Kyo had not chosen for himself a long-range weapon. Just as he reached out to grab it, he paused, checking the rounds it would require. Shrugging off the difference in size, he decided that the weapon, in the group they were in, was still a good addition. He Lifted it from its casing and set it down on the counter.
After foraging for more rounds, He stood up straight, and called out, forgetting the rule of general silence for the moment, “Jack! C’mere for a sec!”
The tiger bounded across the room, knocking over a few displays that were already standing up by miracle alone, and jumped to a stop just a few feet short of the counter, wavering precariously on her too-closely-placed paws for a moment. She looked up questioningly.
“You said you didn’t have a weapon,” he gestured to the somewhat limited array before him.
Jack stared for a moment, testing in her minds eye what she would be able to use and what she would not. After a few minutes of scrutiny, she flicked her tail toward a Ruger .22 pistol, a nine-millimeter carbine-style Beretta rip-off, and an 18-inch machete.
Drew pulled them each from their places and either put them into Jack’s “saddle bags” or found a way to attach them to the harness.
The faint sound of bones popping either into or out of place was followed by a deep, almost moaning sound. Drew tentatively placed his hand on the handle of his revolver, narrowing his eyes. Kyo shuffled tiredly around the corner.
“Oh. It’s just him.” Drew snorted and released his hand from the weapon. “Don’t do that.”
“Nice to see you, too,” Kyo mumbled, inquiring as to the weapon on the counter and then glancing at the door.
The trio crossed streets, staying as much in the shadows and downwind from the undead as they possibly could, given Jack’s currently sensitive nose. The group looked like a walking disaster survival kit, in a way that, had it not been such a grim truth, might have been amusing.
They were racing what was left of the light, albeit there was not much left to race against. But they were determined to reach their lodging before the undead lurking in the streets of Elk Grove had the full advantage.
Drew shoved his hand into his pocked, and tossed the two-way radio to Kyo, glancing over his shoulder.
“Make sure we’ve got a clear way in.” Drew abruptly dropped back form the group.
Kyo glanced back after him, but the tall figure was soon swallowed by the darkness that was setting in. He turned his attention back to the radio and turned to a channel he could not see clearly in the fading light. “Hello, this is Kyo and the Raid Group. Dani or . . . uh… Drew’s friend there? We’re heading in.”
He released the button for a moment. Static. Kyo was just about to return pressure to the “speak” button when a voice made itself intelligible.
~“
Hello?”~ The voice was unfamiliar.
“Uh, Hi?” Kyo’s voice was almost puzzled.
~“
This is Ed. Pretty sure ya don’t know me, but trust me on this one- All’s clear. Now, get your butts up here before the sun’s all the way down.”~
Kyo nodded slightly, acknowledged the “all-clear” and relayed it to Jack and the reappeared Drew.
Jack took advantage of the situation and, eager to set herself down on the other side of the fence and shed her heavy bags of supplies, managed to lift herself up and over the brick wall. The other two jogged around the corner, nearly stepping on the feet of the man dressed in a dark E.G.S.T.A.B.R.T. uniform, carrying a specially designed nightstick and Kevlar riot shield, as well as, Drew had assured them at some point, a gun or three.
“Hey, Ed,” Drew greeted.”
“Hey, Drew, listen- I’ve got this place wired now. So we’ve got ourselves an electrified fence at least until the power goes out.”
A slight grin began to cross the faces of the boys in front of him, just in time to hear jack at the gate, tired and clearly somewhat annoyed that she had no better future than opening and closing doors.
“Hey! You guys comin’ in?”
Ed glanced back at the gate where Jack stood, arms crossed.
“Better hurry back if we want that fence shocking somebody other than ourselves.”
Dani started when the sound shook the door. As soon as she registered the sound as a knock, She looked up, yelled “Half a sec!” and ran to turn off a bathtub’s faucet, tossing a few things out of the way.
She appeared at the door a moment later, grinning slightly. Noticing the haul that Jack was struggling to pick up, and the packs that weighted down both Drew and Kyo, she commented, standing aside to let the group in, “Luck, I see.”
Jack was content with leaving her load just inside the door, collapsing on the couch. She was panting, from physical as well as mental strain- in part caused by the switching back and forth she had been forced into so often during the errand run.
Ed kicked Jack’s pack in a few paced further, and out of the immediate walkway, closing the door ad Drew and Kyo set down their sacks on the kitchen counter.
Dani, clearly in need of something to do, started filling up a few cups of water by way of a newly washed, brimming-full sink. She maneuvered through the people and bags that lay in her way, handing a glass to jack and leaving the other three on a table.
Taking a little bit of time to look at the bags, she applauded the three that had gone out for supplies. “You guys hauled in quite the catch.”