My Zombie Summer (Book 1): The Undead Road (19 page)

Read My Zombie Summer (Book 1): The Undead Road Online

Authors: David Powers King

Tags: #Zombie Apocalypse

BOOK: My Zombie Summer (Book 1): The Undead Road
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Jewel stayed by me like a possum as I checked the customer desk for ammunition. It was empty. I hopped over the counter to make sure and found a shotgun on the ground. I went for it. As I touched the cold steel barrel, I scrambled back fast. Sucking on gas had weakened my sense of smell, but I knew a rotted hand when I saw one. There was no body attached to it.

Yuck!

If I wanted the shotgun—and I did—I’d have to pry the stiff fingers off. I held my breath and did just that, gagging all the while. Jewel’s face turned a tad green, but it was worth it—the gun
and
her face.

I used my new Maglite to check out the specs: a Maverick 12 Gauge with a few shells in the magazine. It would have to do. I loaded it full with target shells and pumped one into the chamber. As for the severed hand, I wondered where the rest of the guy went to.

Chloe brushed against my leg and went into an aisle of baseball equipment. Kaylynn had a new bat in her hands. She took a few practice swings between the gloves and shin guards on the racks behind her.

Her unsuspecting, shadowy silhouette was graceful to look at. “Hi,” she said. “What do you think?”

She swung her bat. It was longer than her last one. “You’ll knock Vectors out of the park!” Jewel said.

Packaging hit the floor the next aisle over.

“Where’s Cody?” I asked.

With my shotgun and Kaylynn’s bat at the ready, we rounded the corner and found Cody in an aisle with limited archery gear. He had a couple of hunting knives strapped to his waist, a new machete on his back—and a pink camouflage bow in his hand. It was the only bow in the place. Jewel snickered, and Cody glanced up.

“Don’t judge me . . .” he uttered.

We all laughed for a second until Cody nocked an arrow, aimed behind us and pulled the string back. The arrow whizzed by my ear and hit something squishy—a one-handed Vector. That was the second time Cody had almost killed me, so he could dispatch a Stalker. Cody wrapped a quiver over his shoulder and smiled.

“Get a cart,” he ordered.

If anyone could say
beat it
without saying it, Cody was our guy. I returned to the front of the store with Jewel to find a cart, noticing mostly emptied pharmacy shelves along the way. We didn’t have to go far beyond the registers. The front wheel of our cart kept veering to the left. Of all the shopping carts, I had to pick the lame one. When we got back to Sporting Goods, Cody and Kaylynn were gone. We called to them. Quietly. No one answered. I slapped myself, and started to freak out.

We’d left Kaylynn alone with Cody.

Jewel and I booked it to the
Clothing Department
. “Cody? Kaylynn?”

“Over here, you guys!” Cody was sitting on the fitting room counter.

“Where’s Kaylynn?” I asked.

“I’m in here,” she called from behind one of the changing doors. “Trying something on.” A minute later, she stepped out, transformed back to her old self: black jeans, a tight black AC/DC tank top with an arrow going through a fiery heart, and black gloves with the fingertips cut off—and a pair of calf-high biker boots with metal clamps instead of laces. “Much better!”

Her style was growing on me, and I looked at the clothes around me. “I could use a change, too.”

It was good a time to give ourselves a makeover. Jewel chose a pair of jeans, sneakers, and a green Sugar Beat shirt. I found new jeans, a fresh pair of steel-toe boots, and a black Harley-Davidson shirt. To top it off, I grabbed a matching zip-up hoodie. Cody didn’t pick out anything, and he wasted no time having us gather anything we could find in the food area. Slim pickings.

Aside from three cans of dog and cat food—good for Chloe—there was little else for humans to eat. We found a few cans of Spam, a box of instant rice, and jars of baby food. Puréed roast beef and veggies—yummy for my tummy. Jewel found a can of generic soda.

It was better than nothing.

Cody loaded up on tuna and sardines. He was welcome to that stuff.

“Say you love me.” Jewel said, maliciously waving a bag of peppered beef jerky at me.

I groveled at her feet and called her, “Master!”

She handed me one strip like it was the most precious thing ever. “That’s all for now, servant.”

I had jerky. She could call me whatever she wanted.

With a quarter-filled cart, we went back to the car and loaded up the trunk. Just as Cody shut it, Chloe started to growl again. Three Vectors lurked around the corner. We could’ve jumped into the car, but something snapped inside me. Whether they were dead or alive, it didn’t matter anymore. They had to be put down.

I aimed for the brain.

“Jay!” Kaylynn cried at me. “Wait!”

I had already pulled the trigger.

 

 

 

 

 

While channel surfing through commercials during a Godzilla movie the previous summer, I saw a Discovery show that’s all about debunking myths. This particular episode
proved
that normal bullets couldn’t penetrate, let alone explode, a tank of propane. I still don’t know how I proved them wrong, because a wall of fire had engulfed the tall Vector and his two undead friends.

The flames billowed right at us next. Jewel pulled on me, and I tripped over her ankle. We fell together, and I was about to use my back as a shield when the fire soared over our heads. My hair singed, but it was the stench of burning flesh that made me reel. Kaylynn was behind us. Her palms faced the fire, her eyes red.

I caught on quicker than a matchstick. She was resisting the flames. No. She was
controlling
the flames.

Chloe barked as Jewel buried her face into the dog’s coat. When the fuel burned out, the hot flames died, leaving us exhausted. The three Vectors writhed on the ground like barbecued worms for a few seconds, and then stopped. Once more, Kaylynn had saved our skins. Her eyes were burning like embers, and she set them on me—that cold stare with hunger inside them.

“Hey,” I said, my heart pounding. “You okay?”

Kaylynn pinned me. Her mouth snarled. Her teeth gnashed. She was strong—really strong. Not even my cut biceps were enough to keep her mouth away from my neck. I then realized what was happening. Kaylynn had turned. All she could think of was eating me!

“Stop it, Kaylynn!” Jewel cried. “Cut it out!”

Chloe joined in. It wasn’t enough to keep Kaylynn from trying to chew my face off. If the infection had taken hold of her, there was no negotiating with a Vector. And my shotgun was well out of reach. I had to use both hands to keep Kaylynn’s teeth away. Jewel raced in and caught Kaylynn by the arm. As she tried to pry Kaylynn off, I swung my fist. My knuckles struck her left cheek. I know, I just punched a girl. Not that I wanted to. I’d rather kiss her mouth than punch it.

Kaylynn sat up and rubbed her cheek. Her red eyes had receded to the same calming blue that I liked so much. She then glared at us, relieved and horrified.

I loaded another shell into the shotgun.

“What in the hell was that?” Cody emerged with a machete, his eyes fixed on Kaylynn’s every move.

In the heat of the moment, I had completely forgotten about him. He was bound to know now. I thought it best to play stupid. “I didn’t see those tanks!”

Cody cocked his brow. “I’m talking about her!”

Figures. Playing stupid wasn’t going to work.

“It’s, uh . . . not what you think,” Jewel said.

“I didn’t think it—I saw it!” Cody’s chest heaved. “She almost took a chunk out of you!” He stopped short and raised his arm. “She’s infected, isn’t she?”

Jewel helped Kaylynn stand up. Both of them did the right thing by standing behind me. Judging by the way Cody glared at us made me glad I had the shotgun.

Would I need to use it? Maybe not, but I could tell from Cody’s body language that he was tense and uneasy, like he was ready to fight me. With the late afternoon sun at Cody’s back—and in our eyes—I half expected tumbleweeds to roll between us. Every single word from then on had to be chosen carefully.

“What if she is?” I said. “Are you going to kill her, like the way you killed Sam’s girl?”

Cody tightened his grip. “Can’t kill what’s dead.”

“But she’s not dead,” Jewel said. “She’s alive!”

Kaylynn pressed her body close to mine.

“Why did they kept her in the healthcare center? They wouldn’t let anyone in that room. They never let me in.” His calculating stare burrowed into my eyes. “So that’s where they sent her, after we found you both in that granary.” Slowly, Cody removed the bow from his shoulder. “They let you go, but they kept her.”

As he reached for an arrow, I shielded Kaylynn. “What are you doing, Cody?” I asked.

He nocked the arrow and pulled the string back. “Get out of the way.”

Crap City! He was serious. “Knock it off.”

“She’s one of them. Get out of the way!”

The realization had finally hit me that Cody wanted to drop Kaylynn without a second thought. The warmth of Kaylynn’s breath on my neck fueled my resolve. For the first time ever, she was relying on me. She shook, perhaps troubled that she’d almost had me for dinner. Cody wasn’t going to touch her, if I could help it.

I raised my shotgun. If I could convince him that we needed Kaylynn, maybe he would lighten up.

It was a long shot, but I had to try. “You saw the explosion.” I nodded at the scorched walls of the big box store. The car, and all of us, were unscathed. “She kept us from turning into toast.”

Cody widened his stance. “What’re you saying?”

“She stopped the fire. Stop being a jerk.”

Chloe joined in, growling at Cody for the first time.

“She
stopped
the fire? You’re kidding!” His arm was shaking. His breath was uneven. He wasn’t buying it. “When did they bite you, in Lincoln? David City?”

“Vectors can’t control fire,” I said. “
She
can.”

“Yeah!” Jewel added. “She can do lots of things.”

Cody’s glare singed each of us. “Like what?”

“Promise not to hurt her and we’ll tell you,” I said.

Like a hard drive into left field, a smirk appeared on Cody’s face. I didn’t like the look of it. What did he think was so funny? “I overheard Sanders say weird stuff before he left. I never believed him until now.” I was confused. Why would he bring up that old kook? Did he know something we didn’t? Cody checked over his shoulder. “He was right about the whole thing.”

I had to know what Cody knew. “What thing?”

“Let me deal with Kaylynn and I’ll tell you.”

“Get lost!” Jewel cried. “We won’t let you kill her!”

“You don’t get it!” Cody hissed. “She’ll kill us!”

“She’s not one of them,” I said. “Get over it.”

Cody’s muscles were tense. So were mine. “They got my mother. I can’t let go!” He steadied his bow and aimed at Kaylynn. “I’m sorry. I can’t let her infect us.”

“Cody,” Kaylynn said, with a voice like flowing water. “I want to know what’s wrong with me.”

“Then answer—when did they bite you?”

I’d had enough. It didn’t matter when she was infected. From the moment we found her in the RV, she was family. And more. I needed a cool head if I was going to reason with him. “If you lose your head, you’ll lose your life. Remember?” I repeated what Cody had said before. I hoped it would strike a chord. “If our parents find the cure, she won’t be infected anymore.”

Cody managed another laugh. “You really like her, don’t you?” I tried to focus, even with my red face betraying me. “Maybe you can wait, but I’m driving.”

“No.” I motioned to the ground. “Drop the keys.”

Not expecting him to comply, Cody reached into his jeans and dangled the keys, taunting us. “If you want them,” he said, “you’ll have to take them from me.”

Yeah right. A wimp like me wouldn’t stand a chance of wringing the keys out of his hand. But I had no choice. I readied myself with an aggressive stance, like I’d seen Dad do at target practice, and raised the shotgun. “Put the keys down. Kick them to us.” Jewel and Kaylynn stepped back, shocked by my command.

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