A New World 10 - Storm (33 page)

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Authors: John O'Brien

BOOK: A New World 10 - Storm
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“That was messed up…I mean, really messed up,” I say, panting.

Lynn places her hand on my shoulder. I look up to see the others looking between me and the labs. Rising, I replace my empty mag.

“Did you get everything?” I ask Jan.

“I believe so,” she answers.

“This better have been worth it. Make it count,” I say.

“What happened? I couldn’t really see anything,” Robert asks.

“Dad, are you okay?” Bri asks before I can reply.

“Yeah, I’m fine. Let’s get the fuck out of here.”

We exit by reversing our route, staying within the well-lit outside corridor. I’m still a touch shocked, and perhaps mentally overwhelmed by what I witnessed. I mean, they were night runners, but in my mind, I saw kids. Not only that, they were children who were hospitalized with varying illnesses. I can’t imagine anything more unfair. Then, there was the nurse who rounded the corner and wailed at the sight of those on the ground. I focus on something else. It’s just too fucked up to keep thinking about.

At the door to the offices, I listen before swinging the door open. With us being in the light, there is little chance of more night runners sweeping out. It’s the same as we left it a dark corridor with nothing inside. We quickly make our way down the stairs and outside.

As we board the Strykers, I pull Lynn to the side.

“Look, I’m sorry for my earlier words. I wasn’t angry with you, I was angry with the situation. It’s hard for me to decide what the right thing is regarding Robert and Bri. My choices seem to be based on which side is winning the internal fight at the moment,” I say.

“I apologize as well. It’s not for me to force a decision like that on you. You have to make those yourself.” She chuckles. “Look at us. Somehow, we’ve managed to switch places.”

“That’s fine with me. You can lead,” I respond.

“Nope,” she replies, shaking her head. “Nice try though, flyboy.”

On our way back through Tacoma, the coastal mountains are lost behind smoke that lingers over the area. The sun is nearly hidden behind the haze, casting the land in an orangish-brown shadow. Heavy columns of smoke rise into the air from new burns. That evening, we start pounding the night runners again.

A Walk in the Park
 

The burning and bombardment up north continues for the next two days and nights. The convoy returns, loads up, and leaves for their second trip. One more week and we’ll be able to leave. The nostalgia I felt about leaving Cabela’s is pushed to the background due to my exhaustion from having flown nearly non-stop since our return from the hospital. Each time the wheels leave the ground, I chant an internal mantra of the number of days remaining before I can rest. That brings enough strength and energy for another mission.

With the convoy’s departure, I take the morning to visit Nic’s resting place. Taking only Robert, Bri, and Lynn, we set out – Mom would accompany us had she not already said her farewells and headed to the bunker. Traveling the roads, my eyes close of their own accord, my head snapping upright. As we drive toward the forest road entrance, it seems like so long since I’ve been here. So many events have transpired that it feels like I’m returning home after years away.

Arriving at the road, we disembark and walk the rest of the way to the hill where Nic lies. The air is chilly as we make our way upward through the trees. Rays of sunlight reach the forest floor through breaks in the canopy. The upper boughs sway in a breeze, causing shadows to dance. Branches crackle underfoot; ferns and bushes brush against our pant legs. I have to wipe unseen spider webs from my face several times.

We reach the hillside where Nic was laid to rest. Small plant shoots sprout from the mound covering my sweet girl. I feel the sun’s rays hitting my shoulders as I stand silently, staring down at the spot where Nic and I once sat, quietly enjoying our time together. My vision blurs and I sink to my knees, oblivious to all else except the memories of Nic her smile as she looked at me, her eyes sparkling with life as we shared a joke. Memories of our shared times rush through my head in a collage of images.

For some time, all of us stand, sit, or crouch in silence as we’re taken up with our own thoughts of Nic. Bri sniffles and wipes her eyes. Tears trickle down Robert and Lynn’s faces. I see little through my own blurred vision.

Lynn is the first to leave, squeezing my shoulder for a moment before heading back down the hill. Individually, Robert and Bri leave, their words to Nic said internally. It’s just me and Nic on the hillside, bathed in rays of sunshine. I place a hand to the dirt mound, feeling its damp chill.

“Nic, hon, I’m going to have to move away for a while, but know that you’ll always be with me. I’ll always be close, no matter the distance. I will see you again, I promise. I miss you so much, and love you dearly.”

Rising, I pause, unable to tear myself away. I feel like I’m leaving her all alone; that I’m leaving her to the mercy of those wretched creatures. In a way, I feel that I’ve lost, having to leave her behind. Turning, I make my way down the hill. Overcome by a terrible sadness, I begin sobbing uncontrollably.

On the return trip, I feel my grief turn to anger. Taking to the skies with a vengeance, our day and night campaign continues. Most of the eastern portions of the Tacoma area lie in smoldering ruins. We should have done this much earlier, but it always seemed like other priorities arose.

 

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Michael stands in an overgrown field, the tiny lights twinkling in the sky overhead. Around him, several pack members race through nearby trees, chasing down small prey. Only part of his mind is on the chase as he stares toward the north. For many nights, he’s stopped in his tracks as he feels packs in that direction disappear from his mind. It had been a while since the death from the night sky appeared. The fact that they had been left alone delayed his push to take out the two-legged lair.

Now, even during the time when the bright light is in the sky, there are times when he wakes to feel pack members vanishing, images of their fear and uncertainty filling his mind. The lairs and his kind are under attack, not only during the night, but at all hours. He wanted to wait longer, perhaps even avoiding it altogether if the attacks stopped entirely, but he knows now that he can’t wait any longer. If he does, there may not be any of his kind left. Tomorrow, he will travel north to deliver the message to the packs. The time has come.

Shrieks of discovery erupt from within the woods to the side. With a last glance northward, he resumes his hunt, running through the field and vanishing into the trees.

Later, standing alone at the edge of the water, Michael stares at the slow moving river as it ripples around the wreckage of what used to be a passage across. Calling out to the other pack leaders, he gets their attention.

“Begin gathering and storing food. Use that as you make your way to the two-legged lair so that you don’t have to hunt. Limit your time in the streets and move together over the next few nights, gathering in larger packs as you work your way closer. Don’t attack until I send a message, but be ready, and stay hidden from the death in the sky. The way across the water is gone. Bring items to throw into it to get across. I’ll be back soon,” Michael says, sending the appropriate imagery.

“We’ll be ready,” the pack leaders respond.

Michael turns and lopes the long distance back to his pack.

 

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“Frank, are you seeing this?” I ask, radioing the base.

We had taken off after hearing the report that the second convoy had reached the bunker, unloaded, and was ready to begin its return in the morning. It was now an hour after nightfall. Looking at the monitor, the darkened streets below are almost empty. From time to time, we spot a couple of packs as they race from one building to another. For the most part, though, the hundreds of thousands of night runners we’ve become used to seeing are gone…vanished overnight.

“Yes, I’m seeing mostly empty streets,” Frank replies.

The thought that so many could disappear, the suddenness of the change, sends a deep shiver up my spine. When night runners change tactics, especially on the magnitude that we’re seeing, it has never boded well.

“We’re returning. I don’t like this,” I state.

We land and I leave the aircraft almost before the propellers finish winding down. Driving to the compound, the few of us remaining all gather.

“Okay, what does this mean?” I ask, looking at Frank.

“I have no idea. For their habits to change so dramatically, I doubt that I could even hazard a guess,” Frank answers.

“Could it be that we’re actually having an effect on them and they’re afraid to show themselves?” Robert asks.

“I suppose that could be. It’s possible that they are hiding out in the buildings,” Frank responds.

“Did you ever find out what they were carrying?” Lynn asks.

“No. I’ve tried but haven’t been able to ascertain what it was.” Frank answers.

“I really never looked very closely. Are they still doing that?” I query.

“As much as I can tell, yes. Until tonight, that is.”

“Have we found anything else that was strange? Perhaps something that would indicate why they have suddenly changed like this?” Lynn questions.

“I did see one thing that was a little strange. Last night, there was a single night runner that showed up on the imagery near the interstate bridge that we demolished. It was on our side of the river. According to the footage, it ran up to the bridge, paused, and then ran away.”

“Where did it go?” Lynn asks.

“It ran off screen to the southeast.”

“A night runner on the wrong side of the river? Do you think it managed to make it across somehow and couldn’t get back?”

“I don’t know, Jack. It’s possible that it was a loner that sensed the others to the north and tried to get to them. When it couldn’t, maybe it turned around and went back to where it came from,” Frank states.

“Should we be worrying about a solitary night runner?” I ask.

“With everything we have going, and with this drastic change, I wouldn’t think so,” Frank says.

We look at the live satellite feed on the monitor. As before, most of the roads are empty of movement. Occasionally, a small pack of night runners will dart out of one building, run across the street, and disappear into another one.

“It looks as if they are making themselves scarce. Perhaps Robert is right and our efforts are finally having a telling effect,” Lynn says.

That seems right, but watching the empty streets still gives me the creeps. For some reason, it’s worse than seeing them out hunting. Three days until the convoy returns, four until we leave.

We hit them several times throughout the day, with the burn crews setting more neighborhoods alight. As night settles, like the previous evening, there isn’t a mass exodus of night runners from within buildings. Cruising above empty, darkened streets, we catch periodic flashes of packs on our screens as they rapidly cross between structures. This time, we stay aloft and send 105mm shells into the few buildings that we see them disappear into. The glimpses of any night runners are sporadic and we end up mostly boring holes through the sky. With nothing really to shoot at, we turn toward base and land. Three days until we leave.

 

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As the darkness folds over the land, Michael stands outside of his lair’s entrance. He tilts his head skyward, receiving messages from the pack leaders far away. The images tell of the packs that have gathered. It happened quicker than he thought. He wanted them to gather slower so they wouldn’t be caught moving, but they are ready. Even though they gathered and stored food, it is still a concern because they haven’t hunted. They won’t be able to hold off for much longer.

Several packs from up north were lost during the day and evening, but staying off the streets at night kept them from getting hit as hard as they had been. He sends images telling how to form a crossing with the items they’ve gathered, and how to get over the walls once they arrive at the two-legged lair.

“Tomorrow at first dark, leave your lairs and attack.”

 

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The next morning, day two of the convoy’s return, Leonard radios to inform us that he’s only a day out and should reach landfall in the early morning. That will fit nicely with our schedule, as we’ll be able to meet with him before leaving the compound for good. I’m interested to see what he’s planning. Although I’m exhausted and walking around like a zombie, things seem to be coming together. Again, that alone creates its own worry. It will be nice to put these anxieties behind and get some real rest for a change. We just have to last until then.

I hold off on a morning flight, as I’m just too tired to be flying. As we circle the urban areas in the afternoon, the ground is nearly hidden beneath the haze of smoke drifting from the burns. Without our cameras, it would be difficult to see any of the buildings that Frank has us targeting. We add more to the mix as our 105mm shells slam into the few structures still standing in the western half of the Tacoma area. The smoke is too thick for us to descend to a low enough level to start additional fires by pumping fuel overboard. The sun descends toward the hills, only a fraction of its light able to penetrate through the smoky haze. As we return, the colors below are washed out, with the landscape taking on a brown cast.

The aircraft is rearmed and refueled for a night run. It seems pointless to do so at this stage, as we haven’t had many targets and the trucks will begin arriving to load up for the last time tomorrow afternoon. However, forgoing the night flight seems like a complacent thing to do. We appear to have the night runners cowering in their buildings and this isn’t the time to let up.

After a rest and something to eat, we wearily trudge into the aircraft. Sitting in the seat and strapping in, my rear reminds me of the days we spent transiting the country and the Atlantic to get Lynn. Bri brings the electrical systems online. Over the intercom, I hear Robert preparing the control center for our night flight.

It will probably just be a repeat of last night
, I think, hitting the start switch.

My eyes feel gritty from lack of sleep. The Spooky slowly comes to life as we start the remaining engines, the fuselage vibrating. The drone of the engines increase as I push the throttles forward and taxi us to the end of our dirt strip, the mantra running through my head. One more day…one more day…one more day.

The aircraft builds up speed as we launch down the airstrip, the last glow of the sun peeking above the mountains. Raising the nose, we lift off and pass over the southernmost concrete wall. Banking north, the green roof of Cabela’s catches the last light of the day, the surrounding grounds covered in shadow. We head toward Tacoma, hoping to catch a few night runners as they emerge from buildings. Leveling off, the odor of smoke is prevalent. Below, orange glows show through the layer of smoke and mark smoldering neighborhoods.

Almost with a whisper, the last light vanishes, and, except for a few fires, the land is cast into darkness. I settle in to a wide orbit in the hopes that we can quickly bring fire down onto the fleeting figures of night runners.

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