Human Extinction Level Loss (Book 1): Nicole's Odyssey (28 page)

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Authors: Philip A. McClimon

Tags: #zombies

BOOK: Human Extinction Level Loss (Book 1): Nicole's Odyssey
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“It’s girls against the guys and I bet we win!” Jordan shouted. 

Sam, Paul, and Billy looked over at Jordan, confused.  As Jordan and Nicole started searching for anything to make moving the Dead easier, Nicole turned to Jordan. 

“You know there are four of them and only two of us.  The odds are slightly in their favor,” she said. 

Jordan smiled up at Nicole.  “Doesn’t matter.  They don’t want to lose to a couple of girls, so now they are going to work twice as hard which means we can take it twice as easy,” she said. 

Nicole beamed down at Jordan.  She slid her finger down her nose and pointed at Jordan. 

“You, Jordan, are a smart girl,” she said. 

Both shared a laugh as they began searching the debris field of mangled machinery.

Forty-Two

 

Sweat dripped from Paul’s face.  His jaw hung slack and he stared at a point on the ground about six feet in front of him.  His arms were extended behind him and he bent at the waist.  His breathing was labored, coming in almost desperate gasps as he trudged forward.  Clutched in his hands was the corner of a blue nylon tarp. Beside him, Walt, in a similar position and breathing only slightly less heavy, clutched the other corner.  They had not found much to make pleasant the arduous task of clearing away hundreds of rotting corpses. 

Behind Walt and Paul, Sam and Nicole heaved another of the Dead onto their own tarp.  Just off the side of the road, Jordan and Billy struggled to pull their blanket out from under two rotting messes of their own.  They tromped up from the ditch and back onto the road, just as Paul and Walt approached.  Nobody said anything as they went through the motions of loading and unloading.  Two by two they moved from the bus, to the ditches by the sides of the highway. 

As Paul and Walt approached, they waited for Sam and Nicole to finish loading a body into their tarp.  Billy and Jordan stood waiting too, not speaking, lost in their own thoughts of being anywhere but there.  A bead of sweat dripped from Paul’s brow and he wiped his arm across his forehead.  The sweat was replaced by a dark swath. 

From inside the bus, Ruby waited patiently.  Unable to assist in any physical way, she helped in the only way she knew how.  The words to an old hymn sounded from inside the bus as Ruby sang. 


This is my story, This is my song.  Praising my Savior, All the day long…
” 

As Nicole and Sam approached, Nicole took a look at Paul.  Seeing the dark swath across his head, she lowered her corner of the tarp and pulled out a rag from her back pocket.  She handed it to Paul, motioning across her own head.  Walt caught his breath as Paul wiped the filth and offal away.  Paul finished and went to hand the rag back to Nicole.  Nicole smiled. 

“Keep it,” she said. 

Paul snorted, “Yeah, right,” he said. 

Walt closed his eyes and smiled up at the sky as Ruby sang.  “She sure does have a pretty voice,” he said. 

Paul looked around.  “Yeah, but do you think she should be singing quite so loud?  What if more of the Dead hear her?” He asked. 

Nicole adjusted her rifle on her back. 

“I think we’ll be okay.  If there were anymore Dead around here, they would have come when they heard us shooting these down,” she said. 

Walt looked to the ditch by the side of the road.  “Besides, it seems appropriate somehow, her singing hymns like that.  What we’re dumping in the gullies used to be people, you know? People who will never get a proper burial, man.  Never get any righteous words read over them.  They didn’t choose this anymore than we did,” he said. 

All eyes turned to Walt and a solemn acknowledgment was exchanged between them.  They rested a moment more, listening to Ruby sing, before resuming their gruesome work.

 


 

Three hours later, the bulk of the Dead had been cleared away from the bus.  Ruby had stopped singing and was resting quietly inside and trying to breath through her mouth.  In place of her singing, a metal grinding noise began to emanate from the bus. 

Nicole, Sam, Walt, and Paul stood back and watched it.  Billy and Jordan approached from the gully.  They both hung their heads and dragged their blanket behind them.  Fatigue overwhelmed them and they moved towards the bus on auto-pilot, not sensing that the others had stopped and were staring at the bus.  Paul reached out for his daughter and stopped her.  Billy kept walking, but when the blanket went taut, he stopped and turned to look at Jordan.  When he saw Paul with his hands on her shoulders he stopped too.  Now more aware, he turned to look at what had caught the other’s attention. 

“I think she’s gonna drop!” Nicole shouted. 

Walt trotted over to the front of the bus and called to Ruby. 

“Hey momma!  You better hold on to something, I think—” Walt’s words were cut short as the bus’s creaking reached a crescendo. 

Though in no real danger, Walt jumped back just as the bus righted itself from its shallow incline.  From inside, Ruby let out a squeal as the bus’s passenger side wheels struck the ground.  The bus bounced and rocked back and forth for several seconds, as inside Ruby hooted and hollered.  Everyone watched in anxious anticipation as the bus settled itself and once again sat motionless across the road.  Walt ran to the sliding doors as the others rushed over. He pushed against the doors.

“Open the doors, momma!” Walt called. 

There was no answer from inside. 

“Ruby, are you okay?!” Nicole called. 

There was still no answer from Ruby and everyone looked at each other concerned.  Walt started to climb the front of the bus and was reaching for the windshield, when the sliding door opened.  Walt hopped down and bounded up the steps and inside, followed by everyone else.  They all looked at Ruby, expecting the worst.  What they saw was Ruby slouched back in one of the seats, gasping. 

“Momma!” Walt shouted as Ruby found her breath and let out another belly roll of a laugh. 

“It’s a wild ride you got here, Hippy!  More fun than my harvester by a long shot!” Ruby said as another wave of laughter hit her. 

Ruby’s joy was contagious as, standing in a bullet riddled bus that was fairly slathered in the remains of the Dead, everyone began to laugh along with her.

Forty-Three

 

With the bus back in driving condition, Nicole had brought the GTO around and pointed it down the highway.  No one wanted to ride in Walt’s bus, not even Ruby.  If they squeezed in tight, they all fit in the GTO, and the pros and cons of this had been discussed. They had all piled in, with Walt being the last.  With the doors shut, they were squeezed in tighter than sardines.  Walt had voiced his opinion that sure the bus stank a little but, it was still in good condition mechanically wise.  At the end of his persuasion, the others had cast furtive looks at the bullet ridden bus and could not get past the remains, that though cleaned up immensely, still made their presence known, chiefly by the pervasive smell of decay.  Walt caved, and they had all piled into the GTO.  Seven bodies, even in a full size car like the GTO, made for a very uncomfortable ride.  Not to mention, if they ran into trouble there was no room to maneuver, let alone use their guns. When it was further pointed out that there were a lot of much needed supplies in the bus that would not fit in the trunk, all eyes turned to Walt, jammed into the back seat next to Paul.  Walt sighed. 

“Let me out, momma.  Someone’s got to drive my bus, and that someone ought to be me, man,” Walt said. 

Ruby opened her door and heaved herself out.  She stood by the hood as Walt squeezed out from the back seat. 

Walt’s absence made all the difference. Paul, Billy and Jordan made themselves comfortable in the back seat.  With his absence, there was just enough room for the others to sit comfortably and still manage a defense should the need arise. 

Walt walked back to the bus with a decidedly downcast appearance.  Ruby stood by the car and watched Walt go. 

“You ready, Ruby?” Nicole asked as Ruby made no move to get back in. 

Ruby did not answer as she stared back down the Road.  As Walt neared the bus, Ruby started after him, her steps only as fast as her arthritic hips could carry her. 

“Hippy!  Come help an old woman, now!” Ruby called. 

Walt turned and when he saw Ruby, he ran back to her.  From inside the car, the others turned and watched Walt put his right hand on Ruby’s shoulder and with the other hand gently grab her hand.  Ruby looked up at Walt and said something the others couldn’t hear.  They watched as Walt smiled and carefully led her back to the bus. 

The show over, Paul, Jordan, and Billy faced front.  Sam continued to stare out the back window, watching as Walt helped Ruby up inside the bus. 

“Get the door, Sam,” Nicole said. 

Sam looked over at Nicole. 

“What? Yeah, sure,” he said. 

Nicole started the GTO as the passenger side door slammed shut.  She smiled to herself as she dropped it into drive and steered her car through the endless maze of wreckage. 

 

On the short stretches where they could get their vehicles up to speed, it wasn’t so bad.  But more often than not, Nicole and Walt had to slow down to a crawl to negotiate the flotsam and jetsam of wreckage that was all pointed away from the direction they were headed.  It was during these times, when the wind did not blow through open windows, that Nicole and the others in the GTO realized it was not just the bus that reeked of the Dead. 

“Hey Sam, call back to Walt.  Tell him we need to find a place to clean up, maybe find a better vehicle than his bus if we can,” Nicole said, as she steered the GTO around a bombed out station wagon. 

Sam picked up the radio from the seat and relayed the message back to Walt. 


Roger that, man
,” Walt called back. 

 


 

Two hours later, They rolled past the Green Tree city limits sign.  Nicole picked up the radio. 

“Hey, Walt.  Looks like there is a town up ahead.  I think we should stop,” she said. 


Sounds good to me, man.  I don’t think it’s just this bus that is stinking, man.  I think some of that foulness might be coming off me, too.  It’ll be good to wash up if we can, you know,”
Walt said
.
 

Nicole chuckled and looked at the others in the back seat.  They all shared a smile at Walt’s conclusion.

As Nicole and Walt steered towards the city square of Green Tree, Colorado, the scene that met them was not one of wreckage but of abandonment.  Nicole circled the square and parked, hood out,  in front of the Green Tree motel.  Walt pulled up, opened the sliding door and looked at Nicole.  Ruby was in the seat just behind him.  She had a handkerchief in one hand and kept it close to her face. 

“What are you thinking, man?” Walt asked Nicole. 

Nicole got out and looked around the abandoned square.  There were not any cars, or signs that anybody had been there in a long time.  She mounted the first step of the bus and poked her head in. 

“I’m thinking we see if that hotel still has running water, as in a shower and maybe a couple of laundry machines.  It’s getting late, so if it seems safe, maybe we even stop for the night.  Park the bus close for now, pointed out, and we’ll take a look around, make sure there aren’t any surprises,” Nicole said. 

Walt nodded as Nicole looked at Ruby. 

“Miss Ruby, you gonna be okay?” she asked. 

Ruby smiled over her obvious nausea. 

“Right as rain, darling, though a hot bath and some clothes washin’ does sound pretty good about now,” Ruby said. 

Nicole smiled then exited the bus.  The others got out of the GTO as Walt parked the bus. 

 

They searched the motel without incident.  It was agreed that Ruby should stay in one of the front rooms by the street and lock the door while the others reconnoitered the buildings around the square. 

An hour later they got back to the motel without encountering any signs of the Dead. 

“Hey, listen… I know we didn’t see any signs of… trouble, but do you think we all should really just pick a room and take a shower?  I mean, I know we want to get cleaned up but… I mean I’ll take first watch, I just think we ought to all stay together,” Billy said.  His words were faltering and betrayed his latent fear. 

“No, that’s a good idea,” Paul agreed. 

“I think that’s a really smart idea.  I don’t care if those things are three towns away, that’s still too close for me,” Jordan said. 

Nicole shifted her rifle on her shoulder.  “I like it.  What do you say, gentlemen?  Ladies first?” 

Walt, Sam, Paul, and Billy all nodded, none willing to let their eagerness for a possible hot shower trump their gentlemanly gesture.  Nicole put her arm around Jordan and the two headed towards the motel. 

“Let's get Ruby.  She probably needs it more than any of us, having to ride on that stinky bus,” Jordan said. 

Walt popped his head up and looked at Jordan with mock hurt in his eyes.  Jordan looked back at Walt. 

“Sorry, Walt,” she said. 

Walt smiled and winked at her.  Jordan giggled as she turned back and disappeared inside the motel with Nicole.

 


 

An hour and a half later, Nicole, Jordan and Ruby pushed their way out of the motel.  Paul stood leaning against one of the posts that supported the overhang covering a sitting area in front of the motel.  Billy sat in one of the rockers that lined the porch.  Paul turned when he heard the women emerge.  Nicole looked around. 

“Where’s Walt and Sam?” she asked. 

Paul was about to answer when a huge motor-home came pulling up.  Everyone looked at it, unsure of who had just arrived.  The engine shut off and a second later, Sam and Walt came bouncing out the side door. 

“Hey everybody!  Look what we found!” Sam hollered. 

Paul smiled and Billy jumped up from his rocker as they all approached to take a closer look at the new vehicle.  New it was, as the price was still written across the windshield in two foot numbers.  Nicole held back and tried to conceal a frown.  Inside she seethed.  Walt had gone off with Sam.  Sure they had searched the area and it seemed clear, but that didn’t mean shit in the new world.  Sam came up beside her. 

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