Children of the After: Awakening (book 1) (7 page)

BOOK: Children of the After: Awakening (book 1)
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Two bottles of root beer, and two bottles of Pepsi. His
mouth watered. Oh, how he wanted to drink them, but then it occurred to him. Dropping
the plastic bottles, he sprawled out upon the floor, pressing his face to its
soiled surface. Looking about the room in the light of his lantern he spied
several things beneath the shelves all around the room.

“Move the other ones!” he shouted, as Jack and Sam realized
what it was he was doing and sprang into action.

One after another the shelves were each moved aside to
reveal what lay hidden and discarded underneath them. After half an hour their
bounty was gathered and all of them looked on, salivating like dogs over the
things they had found. All in all it really wasn’t much, at least it wouldn’t
have been six months ago, but they had added three more bottles of soda to the
first four they found, and three bottles of water too. To add to their
excitement they had found a whole box containing six packs of Twinkies and most
importantly, a king size bag of Skittles. Yeah, candy!

“We can eat it, right?” Will asked his siblings expectantly.

“Yeah, I think Twinkies are pretty much good forever and
probably the Skittles too, kiddo. I think we’re in luck,” said Jack.

“How many gas stations and convenience stores do you think
we passed today, Jack? Fifteen? Twenty? I don’t think we should pass any more
without at least having a look.”

Will bobbed his head up and down. Now
that
was logic
he could get behind.

“Good idea, we can hit the other two across the intersection
in the morning,” Jack responded.

“So… Now can I have some candy?” Will pressed.

“Sure… Just as soon as we get that door blocked off. Safety
first, buddy,” Jack said as Sam giggled at his frustration.

Carefully putting down the prized bag of candy, Will rose
and crossed the room to resume his duty. Picking up the poles, he found them
not as heavy the second go round, and wedging them into place, just as Jack had
done before, he held them patiently as his siblings began to drag the shelf
nearer. After about a minute the shelf was in place, securing the lower end of
the poles in position. With the door secured, all three sat in a loose circle
upon the floor and began opening their spoils.

Tearing open his bag of mouthwatering, shiny pieces of
rainbow-colored candy, Will dumped half a dozen pieces into his waiting palm,
and tilting back his head he tossed them straight into his mouth. Gnashing his
teeth upon the chewy bits, saliva seemed to flow like a faucet into his mouth
as he swallowed time and again, audibly letting his siblings know of his taste
buds’ ecstasy.

“These are sooo good,” he proclaimed when finally he
swallowed the first round.

Sam and Jack both grinned at him knowingly as they each
opened a package of Twinkies and he watched their faces as they too shared in
their first bites of delicious sugar-induced bliss. Moans of enjoyment escaped
both of them, and he giggled at the faces they made, their eyes rolling in
their sockets as both of them tilted back their heads. Then he had an idea.

“Here, you guys want some?” he asked, holding out his prized
bag of candy.

“Sure, little man,” Jack said, holding out his hand.

“I’ll have a couple, but you keep the rest for yourself,”
Sam answered.

Into each hand he poured a few candies and watched as they
repeated their earlier show before he twisted up the bag of candy, deciding to
save it for the days to come. God knows he didn’t want to devour the last bag
of candy on the planet and never have any again.

“Here, Will, have some Twinkies,” Sam said as he put his
candy away.

Accepting the small package with the pair of yellow spongy
cakes inside, he ripped it open with his teeth, the way Dad had showed him, and
pulled out the first cake. Mushing it into his mouth, he savored the rich
sugary taste a minute before more or less just mashing it with his tongue and
swallowing the bite whole. His Twinkies vanished before he even realized what
happened, but that left him with another treat to enjoy. Selecting a bottle of
orange Faygo from their newly acquired collection of drinks, he twisted the cap
as Jack nodded to his wisdom and took a bottle of soda for himself. Hearing the
bottle hiss as the seal broke, he watched the bubbles rise through the orange
liquid in the bottle before completely removing the top. He had learned the
hard way, on more than one occasion, what could happen if you opened a pop bottle
too hastily.

Lifting the bottle to his lips, he savored the both cooling
and burning sensation the carbonated liquid had upon his mouth and throat. Taking
several big gulps, it felt as if he could actually feel layers of ash and grime
he had been breathing all day get stripped away as he drank.

With little to no conversation, all three sat around their
collection of supplies for a while, each daydreaming about whatever memories
these flavors recalled unto each of them before they decided it was time for
sleep. Waiting until both his big brother and sister were upon their cardboard
beds, Will switched off his light which each of them had taken turns shaking
over the last few hours. It wasn’t long before dreams of candy stores and cakes
drifted him off to a deep restful sleep.

Chapter Seven

Jack awoke stiff but refreshed, and looking about his
surroundings he found Sam already awake, quietly shaking Will’s light while
sitting upon one of the shelving units with her back against the wall. It was
apparent she had been awake for some time, as she had somehow managed to apply
her makeup, which although was becoming more acceptable prior to the event,
still detracted from her natural features too much for his own taste. He didn’t
know whether her style was considered punk or goth or some other form of
leather-clad trend that he didn’t have a name for, but it was who she
identified with and as such he did not usually weigh in with his own opinions.
The key word being ‘usually’.

“So… you’re up awfully early, crow,” he mocked her, with a
reference to the nineties movie starring Brandon Lee.

“Har har. Your originality is stunning,” she retorted. “So… jerk,
what is the plan for today?”

“Keep walking, but this time we check for supplies along the
way.”

“Still heading to Grandma’s, then?”

“Why? Do you think we should go somewhere else?”

“I don’t know,” Sam admitted. “I just really don’t want to
see it like the rest of the city. I mean, that’s where we have had every
Christmas and Thanksgiving for my whole life. I just don’t want to have that
memory ruined for me. For Will either.”

“I know. Me too. But without any more information, I just
don’t know where else to go. I had thought about heading over to the Great Lakes,
but if there were any military still in the area, I think the city would be
crawling with them. You know?”

“Yeah, at least a helicopter or something.”

They sat in silence for a few moments and Jack couldn’t help
but let his mind wander. The lack of any sign of a human presence bothered him
to no end. Questions swirled in his mind that he had no answers for. He feared
the answers. They had gone a whole day without a single sign of life in the
huge city. They had walked miles and miles and found nothing. Not one thing.

“Do you think there is anyone else left?” he asked his
sister.

“I don’t know. There has to be, right? I mean… billions… to
just us? It just doesn’t seem possible.”

“I know. But we haven’t seen a thing.”

“We kind of have, though. All this stuff is gone, right? All
the food in the apartments had to of been taken after whatever happened.”

“But what if it wasn’t just an event? What if the event
triggered a disease, or a disease triggered the event and everyone just died?”
Jack wondered aloud.

“I don’t think so, if they had, then where did they go?”

“I don’t know, Sam. I thought of that too, but nothing makes
any sense. I just can’t make it work out in my head. Nothing adds up.”

“What if there
were
bodies everywhere, but someone
cleaned them up?” Sam asked, her voice sounding more hopeful.

“You mean like after whatever happened here they came in,
cleared the city, and declared it uninhabitable or something and that’s why
there aren’t any people or anything?”

“Yeah, like Hiroshima. Wasn’t there a power plant on the
edge of Lake Michigan? Was it nuclear?” Sam asked.

“I don’t know. I’m really starting to wish I paid more
attention in school. I’m thinking you might be close, but that still doesn’t
explain some things.”

“Like what?”

“The food missing from the apartments and even here, but
more than that, why aren’t there any planes in the sky? Not one. There used to
be planes everywhere.”

“Yeah, but there used to be airports in Chicago, maybe they
don’t have a reason to come here anymore.”

“Yeah, I guess. It just seems too weird,” Jack concluded.

After their chat they both drifted off again into their own
thoughts until Will began to squirm around, signaling that he would be awake in
the very near future. Without a whole lot of selection to choose from, Jack
rose from his cardboard bed and poured the three remaining packs of Twinkies
out of the box, and into his lap. Deciding he didn’t want to wait for Will to
wake up gradually, he shook his younger brother’s shoulder gently and when he
awoke he handed him a sugar and caffeine laden Pepsi to get the day started.
That
should certainly put some pep in his step.

After a hasty breakfast they removed the barricade from the
door, and made their way back out into the street. It was time to search for
some more supplies. Crossing the road they entered another gas station, but
found the only cooler it contained had been destroyed and had no lingering
supplies. Minutes later, however, they entered the third gas station inhabiting
the intersection and once inside they managed to find a snack-sized bag of
chips along with a candy bar and two more bottles of soda. Then it was back to
the streets.

 

For most of the morning their journey led them down the
center of the same road, mile after mile, occasionally ducking into the
wreckage of one building or another to scavenge for supplies, usually turning
up empty. When afternoon came, and the sun beamed down upon them from between
wispy clouds Sam froze in her steps, causing both him and Will to stop as well.
Turning to look at her, Jack opened his mouth as she gave him a look that would
have turned a rampaging bear away. Watching as she raised a finger to her lips,
it was Will who perked up next, turning his head this way and that as if
seeking something out. It was only a second or two more when he heard it for
the first time. There was a sound in the city.

* * * * *

Sam froze in her tracks, certain she had heard something
besides her own breathing and the rhythmic crunching of glass beneath their
feet. Turning her head this way and that to look both up and down the road, she
heard it again as Jack turned to look at her. He had the audacity to open his
mouth, though she quickly silenced him with a look. Straining her senses, she
heard it again, and turning her head she was now certain.

Somewhere in the distance ahead, perhaps around a corner or
a few blocks away, something or someone else was moving among the streets. They
could all hear it now, but it was Jack who made the first move.

Her shoulder grasped by one of his large hands, Jack led her
to duck as they moved quickly to the side of the road in the shadow of a
building’s ruins. All around them the sparkling blackened wasteland stood as if
frozen in death, but ahead they could hear the sound growing. Waiting several
moments she was able to slow her breathing and listen, as they all did, angling
their heads and necks to pick up the sounds. The longer they waited the more
distinct the sounds became, and Sam knew that something was moving.

In pairs the crunches came in rapid succession, sort of like
a beating heart, but it was accompanied by a growling and grinding sound that
raised the hairs on the back of her neck and arms. Whatever it was, it was big.
Just when she thought she had located the direction of the sound, another heart-like
beat hammered through the crushed glass of a nearby road at a much faster
rhythm, moving from a different direction as if to intercept the first and
then, like all the sounds had begun, they went silent.

“I think we should check it out,” Jack whispered, causing
her to jump.

“We don’t know what it is,” Sam said, fear welling up in her
stomach.

“Exactly. We need to know what is out here. We need to know
what happened. You guys want to know, right?” Jack replied.

Sam nodded in reply and noted that Will did as well. Letting
Jack take the lead, she reached out and took Will’s hand as they moved slowly
across the crumbling face of the building beside them. Reaching the next corner
they cautiously looked out in all directions, before turning right down the
narrow intersecting street in the direction of the now absent sounds. It was
two blocks in the new direction before they heard another sound, though it did
not have the same rhythm as the previous. Even so, they used it to again change
direction, turning left, back in the original direction they had been traveling
for the majority of the day.

Painstakingly slow they crept along, and Sam silently cursed
every crunch of glass beneath her feet. Moving amongst the shadows of the buildings,
it was two more blocks when Jack stopped abruptly. Then, unexpectedly, a voice
sounded from somewhere ahead, and looking back at her, Jack pointed to the
intersection just a dozen or more yards ahead and they began to move once more,
only more slowly and more carefully than before. With each step she could hear
the voice more clearly, though it was faint and she couldn’t make out the
words, but it
was
a voice. The implications were astronomical. They
weren’t the only people alive anymore. And then the voice yelled.

Still she had not understood the words it yelled, but the
rhythmic thrumming of glass and asphalt sounded once more, only for a second or
two and then both the yelling and the pounding stopped. Had whatever made the growl-like
sound attacked the man? Shivers lanced down her spine.

Step after tedious step they crept to the corner, and Jack
peered around it cautiously before waving for each of them to join him. Peeking
around the corner with her brothers, Sam saw something she had not expected at
all. There, perhaps three and a half blocks further down the road to their left
sat a man on horseback. He wore an odd hat and a long duster jacket like in
western movies, and behind him was another horse and wagon, guided by yet
another man dressed similarly. Though their words could not be heard from here,
it was plain enough to see that they were talking, and seconds later they began
to advance down the street towards Sam and her brothers.

Watching their slow advance, Sam labeled each of the strange
sounds they had heard before. The beating hearts were the horses’ hooves upon
the ground and the growling or grinding sound was the cart’s wooden wheels
cutting a trail through the glass shards upon the road. People. People and
horses. Not everyone was dead.

Watching further, the man on horseback turned a corner,
steering away from her concealed location, and Sam watched as the horse-drawn
cart disappeared around the corner behind him.

“Well, that answers a lot of questions,” Jack said, sighing
loudly.

“Yeah, but raises a lot of new ones. Do you think we should
approach them, maybe at least ask them what happened?”

“Let’s go talk to them,” said Will, weighing in with his own
opinion.

“I don’t think so,” Jack objected. “Not yet. What if they
did this?” he added, gesturing to the buildings around him. “We still don’t
know anything. They could be dangerous.”

“Yeah, but they could also be a lot of help if they aren’t
dangerous,” Sam argued.

“Yeah,” Will agreed.

“Guys, I’m sorry, but Dad said to keep you safe, and that’s
what I’m doing.”

And that was the end of it, at least that’s what Sam thought
before something caught her attention, or rather the lack thereof. The sound of
the man on horseback and cart had stopped again.

Lifting her gaze from Jack to the road beyond, the air
caught in her chest as she locked eyes with the man on horseback just a block
down the street. Without the ability to warn her brothers, her heart began
hammering in her chest as the rider drove his heels to the beast’s flanks and
began thundering towards them. Finally her control over the air in her lungs
was restored but all she could manage was a scream, but Jack had already turned
around as the rider thundered towards them.

“Run!” Jack shouted as Sam took heed of his words and began
down the road the way they had come, half dragging Will with her.

The thundering of hooves grew louder and louder, and briefly
Sam wondered how it could be that her track star brother remained behind her
and Will when it occurred to her that he wasn’t with them at all. He had
stopped to buy them time and in doing so, protect them.

* * * * *

Will raced along as fast as his little legs would carry him,
pumping out a steady rhythm as his feet slipped atop the broken shards of glass
beneath him. Moving as fast as he could, Sam tugged at his arm tirelessly,
dragging him to speeds that were unobtainable on his own. Behind them the man
on a horse thundered towards them, seemingly with malice in his heart as he
gained on Will and his siblings.

One block and then another they ran, when Sam looked back
over her shoulder, not at him, but beyond, as her face contorted in fear. Will
stopped, dragging Sam to a stop with him, as he spun to look back the way they
had come. His eyes going wide, his heart dropped into the pit of his stomach as
his airway closed. Barely jogging a block behind, Jack had all but stopped as
the man upon the horse was right on top of him.

Faster than Will could even process, the man on the horse
reached down as he thundered past and grabbed ahold of Jack’s collar, dragging
him along with the horse as he slowed the beast to a stop. Reaching up towards
his neck, the collar choking him, Jack thrashed his legs about, pulled off his
feet by the man in the saddle.

Will felt himself hiccup. He still wasn’t breathing. It was
an attack. Sam screamed, and everything went black.

 

Unsure how much time had passed, though it felt like little
more than a blink of an eye, Will’s sight and hearing was restored. Pulling
himself up to a seated position, all was just as it had been before, except Sam
was no longer holding his hand. Then he saw her.

Will witnessed in that moment when, like a crazed animal,
Sam raced back down the street the way they had run, screaming, with a length
of charred pipe in her hands. Fighting to focus as the edges of his vision went
black again, Will watched as Sam lunged towards the man whose bearded face was
much obscured by the shadow of his hat. In defense, the man leaned away from the
blow meant for his head. Sam missed, but it didn’t matter.

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