Apocalypse Atlanta (74 page)

Read Apocalypse Atlanta Online

Authors: David Rogers

BOOK: Apocalypse Atlanta
3.25Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

When whatever it was that she’d hit rolled off the windshield, up and over the roof, she barely noticed.  The car felt like it was starting to skid around to the left, and she jammed her foot down on the brake as she fought for control.  She couldn’t see!  And all she could think of was how bad it would be to run off the road and straight into a building or utility pole.  As she tried to correct for the skid, she felt the car heeling right, then start wobbling violently as she tried to tame the back and forth motion into something resembling a straight line.

She was still trying when she lost the battle, as the car’s wobble slowly, so terrifyingly slowly it seemed, turned into a tip to the left.  Jessica gasped as the world rotated around her, hearing Candice screaming.  The Accord came off its wheels and down on its left side with a skittering thud.  She heard a series of rapid bangs, something punched her in the head from two different sides, and suddenly everything went black.

The next thing she knew, someone was shaking her.  Candice, it had to be Candice.  She heard the girl’s voice, high and thin with terror, pleading with her.  “Mom!  Mom!  Wake up!  Mom!”  Something was wrong with her hearing.  Her ears were ringing so loudly Candice’s voice seemed to be coming at her from the top of a very deep well.

And everything seemed off kilter, wrong somehow.  She didn’t know what it was, but it was confusing.  Disorienting.  Jessica shook her head a few times, trying to drive the cobwebs away.  “Mom!  Are you alright?  Mom!”

Jessica opened her eyes and blinked several times, as if that would pull her thoughts back on track.  Wreck.  She’d wrecked the car.  Oh God!  She realized she was on her side, against the door.  The seat belt was digging painfully into her shoulder and hip.  That was why things felt so wrong, well part of it anyway.

“Candice?” she asked, turning her head to the right, up really.  Her voice came out thick and slightly slurred, and she tasted blood in her mouth.  The salt and iron tang was unpleasant and scary.  She could feel her lips acutely; they were swollen like she’d been hit in the face, making it hard to shape words properly.

Her daughter’s face came into focus slowly, reluctantly, as if her eyes were still remembering proper function.  The girl’s expression was drawn wide and white with stress, her eyes frantic and desperate as they fastened upon Jessica.  Candice hung against her seatbelt above Jessica, feet braced against the center console to support herself as she shook Jessica with her left hand.

“Mom!”

Jessica bent her arm at the elbow and awkwardly patted the girl’s hand as it shook her shoulder.  It took her three tries to even make contact.  “Okay.  It’s okay.” She muttered, then blinked and shook her head again.  It made her dizzy, but she felt some of the ice on her thoughts starting to come loose.  “Are you okay?”

“I think so.” Candice said anxiously.  “My ears and nose hurt.”

Jessica blinked again, then swept her eyes around the interior of the car.  The windshield was still a pebbled pattern of a thousand small cracks.  The airbags had deployed, now hanging limply from the steering wheel, the passenger side of the dash, and along both side headliners above the doors.  Her head had been nestled in the curtain bag to her left.  She heard a sound and realized the engine was still on, sounding very odd.  She reached out and fumbled for the ignition, finally getting her fingers on the key and turning to switch it off.

As the engine reluctantly died, her hearing improved a little.  Her ears were definitely trying to recover from all the airbag deployments, which might take some time.  She remembered Brett having told her once the airbags basically used what he described as shotgun shells to trigger.  Hazily she wondered if the airbags hadn’t been worse than just tipping over would have been, but she thrust the thought aside.  It wasn’t helping at the moment.

“Alright.” Jessica said, then spat to the side to try and clear her mouth.  She didn’t dare look at what came out when she did, but her mouth was clearer.  “Phone.  Candice, help me find my phone.  We need to call Doctor Morris.”

“We need the police.” Candice said, though her head was already swiveling around as she searched the interior of the car.  “An ambulance.”

Jessica shook her head very slightly.  “They’re not coming.  They’re all busy trying to help sick people.”

“You’re sick.” Candice said, stretching from within the restrictions of her seatbelt for something on her side of the car.

Jessica blinked, then made her voice sharp.  “Never say that.”

“What?”

Jessica spat again, then continued a little more gently.  “Candy Bear, right now sick means something bad.  Don’t say sick unless they’re like the people on the news, okay?”

“Okay.”

“I’m serious.” she persisted, thinking of someone hearing that word and immediately shooting or killing whoever was being talked about, before an explanation could be given.  “You say injured, or hurt.  Don’t say sick unless they’re like . . .” she floundered to a halt abruptly.

“Like Joey and Sandra.”

Jessica blinked, then had to step hard on her emotions to avoid bursting into tears.  “Yes, like Joey and Sandra.  And anyway, I’m fine.” Jessica said, silently hoping that was true.  Her body was continuing to report in, and she felt bruises and aches all over.  The worst was her knee, the left one.  It throbbed steadily, though when she reached down she didn’t feel any rips or tears in her jeans, nor did it feel wet like it was bleeding.  It just hurt.  A lot.  “Just find the phone.”

“I am.” Candice muttered, still straining towards something on her floorboard, out of Jessica’s sight behind the dashboard.  Jessica fumbled at her seatbelt, finally getting her fingers on the button and disengaging it.  The belt came loose and she slumped the final few inches to the side of the driver’s compartment.  She clamped her mouth shut to avoid cursing when her knee hit the door.  Painfully, moving carefully, she shifted until she knelt against the driver’s side window.

Straightening as best she could, she saw the phone lying at the far front of the passenger side floorboard, out of Candice’s reach.  Jessica grabbed the charger cord that still connected the power socket to the phone and tugged, reeling it in.  Candice finally got hold of it as Jessica tugged on the cord, and gave a sound of triumph.  “Got it.”

“Thank you sweetie.” Jessica said as her daughter handed the phone over.  The screen was cracked, but responded as she swiped to unlock it.  She could feel more damage, cracks, on the phone’s case as it rested in her hand, but she ignored all that as she used the recent calls list to call Dennis.

On the second ring the call was picked up.  “Hello?”

Jessica paused, confused.  The voice was male and unfamiliar.  “Dennis Morris?”

“He’s busy.  Who is this?”

“Jessica.  Jessica Talbot.  I just spoke with him.”

“Ah.” The man sounded like he was making a checkmark on some list he was maintaining.  “You’re enroute?”

“No!” Jessica said, trying to keep from shouting.  “There’s been an accident.  My car’s overturned.  We’re stranded here.”

“Christ.” she heard the man cursing, then some background voices.  They were just a touch too indistinct to make out, but there were more than two or three.  She couldn’t tell if they were arguing or yelling or talking, but they didn’t sound like they were having a calm conversation.

Jessica felt her hand growing warm as it clutched the phone and made herself loosen her grip.  The phone was her lifeline, literally.  “Hello?”  She said loudly, trying to get the attention of whoever had taken her call.  “Hello!”

“Right.” The voice was back.  “Location, where are you?”

Jessica frowned, trying to think.  “Peachtree Industrial Boulevard.  North of Highway-120, not too far north.  I was almost to it.”

“Okay.  What kind of car?” She had the distinct impression the man was writing, his voice now had that unique flat quality people tended to adopt when they were splitting their attention.

“It’s an Accord, Honda.  Silver.” Jessica said quickly.  “It’s overturned, on its driver’s side in the road.” she added, trying to anticipate his questions even as she glanced around, then out the rear window of the car for confirmation.  Yes, they were still in the road.  She could see the pavement stretching out in that direction.

“Are you secure?”

“Secure?”

“Are there any zombies nearby?” The man asked calmly.  “Is the car intact?”

Jessica looked around.  She did not consider this intact.  The news had showed her far too many scenes of zombies beating their way into vehicles that were surrounded.  Even if the windshield weren’t already damaged, she knew this wasn’t safe.  “No, it’s not.”

“Okay.”  Her hand was still warm, almost hot now.  She shifted, holding the phone in a sort of claw grip.  Jessica realized the man’s voice was fading.  “You need to–” she heard faintly, each word quieter than the one before it, until she couldn’t hear him anymore.

“Hello?  Hello!”  Jessica looked at the phone, but the screen was black.  She shook it in frustration, then put it back to her ear.  “Hello?”

“Mommy?” Candice asked fearfully.

“Something’s wrong with the phone.” Jessica said as calmly as she could manage.  She had no idea why it wasn’t working now.  Turning it over, she felt heat radiating from the back, not enough to be dangerous, but definitely warmth.  A lot of warmth.  It didn’t make any sense.  Her phone never did that.

“Mommy.”

“What sweetie?” Jessica asked, still perplexed over the phone.  Maybe the wreck had done something to it.

“I hear someone walking.”

Jessica forgot the phone instantly, letting it slip from her fingers.  “What?”

“Footsteps.” Candice said, pointing at the windshield.  “Don’t you hear them?”

Jessica held her breath and listened, cursing the persistent distraction the ringing sensation in her ears was providing.  Her hearing was still struggling to recover from the aftermath of the airbags.  Everything seemed to be clouded by sound she knew wasn’t really there.  She concentrated as seconds passed.

Finally, as she opened her mouth to say she couldn’t hear anything, she abruptly did.  Feet scraping on pavement.  Such a simple thing, normally so innocuous, but now enough to send icy chills through her very soul.

“Quiet.” Jessica whispered, reaching up and putting her hand on Candice’s shoulder.  Straightening further, her body an awkward fit for the sideways car, she managed to get her head close to her daughter’s.  “Be.  Quiet.” she breathed into Candice’s ear.

Candice grabbed Jessica’s hand with both of hers, clasping it tightly.  Jessica could feel the girl’s pulse strongly, felt her own heart beating rapidly.  Jessica squeezed Candice’s hands reassuringly and waited, praying. 
‘Please.  Please God, let it keep going.  Please let it go away.’
  She breathed as shallowly as she could, trying to minimize any noise.  Seconds ticked past.  She strained her ears, trying to figure out what was happening outside the car.

A loud thump behind them made Jessica jump, catching her breath, as Candice let out a sound halfway between a shriek and a scream.  It was loud, enough that it hurt even through her already partially deafened hearing.  Jessica’s head came around, looking at the back of the car.  There was a figure visible right at the rear window.  As her eyes found it, its hands and arms raised again, coming down against the window.  The car rocked slightly under the blow.

Candice’s hands on Jessica’s were squeezing hard enough to hurt, a lot, as the girl’s breath came very rapidly, like she was running.  Jessica’s mind locked for a second as she stared at the figure to the rear of the car.  It hit the rear window again, this time raising a crack, and Jessica’s instincts kicked in.

She just hoped the questions the man at Dennis’ house had asked meant someone was coming.  She didn’t know what she was going to do if no one came.

“We’re getting out of the car.” Jessica said, trying to free her hand from Candice’s death grip.  She wouldn’t let go, and Jessica tugged harder.  “Candice!  Let go!  Get ready to unbuckle your seatbelt.”  Jessica said urgently.  “Let go of me!”

Candice’s grip finally slackened, and she reached for the seatbelt’s buckle.  Jessica shifted her arms, trying to brace for what she knew was coming.  There was a click, and suddenly the seatbelt was no longer holding the girl in the seat above Jessica.  She tried to support her daughter, but Candice was heavier than Jessica expected.

Jessica’s breath wooshed out with an ‘oof’ of surprise as Candice fell down into her arms.  The extra weight also made her press down harder on her left knee, which responded with an immediate spike of throbbing pain that she barely contained without crying out from.

“Good.  Good.” Jessica got out, struggling to catch her breath, as she tried to shuffle aside far enough for Candice to fit next to her.  The car rocked again, and she leaned over to look in the back of the car.

There, she grabbed her purse and dropped it over herself, angling the strap across her body from the right shoulder as she settled the bag on her left hip.  She scanned around the backseat, trying to ignore the thump she heard only a couple of feet from her, then leaned back further to check under the front seats.

Finally she spotted the lock box, sitting askew under the passenger seat.  It resisted her fingers’ attempts to get a grip.  The latest thump was followed by another cracking sound, and she darted a desperate look at the rear window.  There were multiple cracks showing in it now, and one of them was enormous.  She scrabbled at the box, slowly, so terribly slowly, managing to coax it out.  When it finally came loose and fell into her hands, she shoved it into her purse.  As it fit in she again blessed the oversized ‘Mom’ purse she’d carried ever since a few months after Joey was born and realized why moms had big purses.

Other books

The Hansa Protocol by Norman Russell
Dare by Glenna Sinclair
A Soldier's Story by Blair, Iona
Identity Thief by JP Bloch
The Interrogative Mood by Padgett Powell
The Lifeguard by Deborah Blumenthal