Carl said, “I don’t think they know they can. Not yet anyway. It’s like back at the hardware store. Remember how long it took them to come around front when they couldn’t get in through the back. And even then they didn’t wander to the front of the store on their own.”
And then the glass
did
shatter. Carl felt fingers clamp down on his wrist. The fingers were warm and sweaty and mushy. He let out a high-pitched scream. His first response was to pull away, and as he did he tripped over his own feet. Gravity, as reliable as ever, assured his fall to the ground, and he pulled Carrie Martinez forward through the window. He felt her hand slip from his wrist as her body was impaled on the long slivers of broken glass still clinging to the bottom of the window. He scrambled back.
Carl looked back in the direction of the window. Carrie Martinez hung halfway into the house, blood so dark it was almost black gushed from her stomach. From behind him, Tina made a retching sound.
Carrie Martinez’s eyes remained blank. Her mouth opened and closed as if keeping beat to some rhythm only she could hear. When he was only a boy, Carl had enjoyed going on fishing trips with his father. The first fish he ever caught was a small catfish out of Granite Lake, and he remembered his father holding it up to his face and how the fish’s mouth had opened and closed the same way Carrie Martinez’s mouth was opening and closing now. He had felt sorry for the fish; he’d had his father toss it back into the lake. He had watched it flounder for a moment and then shoot down into the depths. A part of him felt the same compassion for Carrie Martinez. After all, whatever was wrong with her wasn’t her fault.
But you can’t help her,
he thought.
No throwing this one back.
Carrie Martinez’s mouth stopped moving. Her head sank forward, and for a moment she looked as though she were bowed in prayer. Her long black hair reached down to the carpet. It glistened with moisture in the flashlight’s beam.
Sweat,
Carl thought.
Just like her hand was sweaty. That must be another symptom. Part of the fever or something.
A man appeared in the window behind Carrie Martinez’s impaled body and placed his hand on her back, using it for support as he got his first leg up, trying to work his way through the window.
The rifle had landed several inches away. Calmly, Carl leaned over and snatched it up, took his time aiming, the man so close that his head was all that could be seen through the rifle’s scope.
Carl fired. The top of the man’s head disappeared and he fell back through the window, landing on the ground with a wet thud.
“I’m an army of one,” Carl said, laughing, as he pulled himself up off the floor.
More of the rabid things appeared in the window.
Lining up like ducks in a row,
Carl thought, taking aim with the rifle.
He picked them off one by one until there were none left. Taylor watched, knowing he should put a stop to it, but he was caught up in the thrill of it just as much as his brother.
In the end, he had put down all five of them, not counting the two by the car or Carrie Martinez. He had experienced that rare surge of adrenaline, but it had worn off as quickly as it had come, leaving him breathing heavily and physically drained. He lowered the rifled, resting the stock on the floor, leaning on it like a makeshift cane.
Carl approached the window slowly and poked his head through, careful not to touch Carrie Martinez’s slumped over body.
“That’s a massacre,” he said. His stomach went queasy; something hot and nasty got as far as the back of his throat before he managed to hold it back. He gagged, dropped the rifle, and held a hand to his mouth. “I’ve gotta use the bathroom.” He fled from the room.
“Is he going to be all right?” Tina asked.
Taylor nodded. “I think so. It’s not every day you kill someone. Even if they aren’t human anymore. But he’ll be all right. Give him a couple of minutes to himself. I’ll check on him after that.”
He walked over to where the rifle lay on the floor and picked it up. He undid the bolt and ejected the spent casing. The flashlight was on the floor, the beam pointed at the shattered window, illuminating Carrie Martinez. In the weakening light, her hair was the color of canned spinach. He stared out the window. “We can’t stay here. It’s not safe. More of those things will have heard the gunshots and they’ll come running.”
On the street, Tina’s Escort was idling quietly. It wouldn’t last much longer if they didn’t feed it gas, but Taylor wondered if any of the pumps would work. Nothing else did, so it was hard to believe their luck would turn for the better.
Carl entered the room, wiping his mouth with his forearm. Taylor held the rifle out to him, but he shook his head. “Why don’t you hold onto it for now.”
“Nice shootin’.”
“Yeah?”
“Yeah.”
“Thanks. I guess.” He felt like baby brother again. It made him feel ashamed yet comfortable. It was an easy niche to fall into. You could take a lot of excuses with you into a role like that. “On second thought…it’s not like you’d be very handy with this thing. You never did like to hunt.”
“Wasn’t for me.”
Carl turned to Tina. “He couldn’t bring himself to hurt an animal no matter how small.”
“I could never see the fun in it,” Tina said.
“So are we getting out of here or what?”
They made their way to the car, vigilant as they hurried down the narrow sidewalk. Carl glanced back at the house before getting into the car, sadness in his eyes.
“The town seems so empty,” Tina said.
Carl said, “It’s always like this here at night. That’s why my brother likes to take his long walks.”
Taylor looked at the houses lining either side of the street, wondering if there were survivors in any of them
. If there are, then they’re the smart ones,
he thought.
Smart enough to stay put and be quiet.
“I don’t see anyone,” Tina said.
“They’re hiding somewhere,” Carl said. “I’d bet money on it.” The rifle stood upright between his legs, resting against the back of the driver’s seat. Carl had one hand wrapped around the barrel. His window was cracked to provide easier access in case he needed to start shooting from the car.
They passed an elementary school. The playground was visible just west of the school. The jungle gym caught Carl’s attention. In the dark, it resembled a giant steel spider web.
As they reached the outskirts of town, the houses were spaced farther apart. Taylor drove them another half a mile, at which time their parent’s house became visible a quarter mile down the road.
Carl pointed. “That’s it up there,” he said to Tina.
It was a two-story house, painted white with brown shingles on the roof. A sizeable deck was built onto the left side of the house. A picnic table sat on the deck. Taylor slowed the car. For some reason, he felt the urge to keep going. He told himself that maybe it was better not to know, that some of the alternatives were far too dark to entertain. But he also realized he must be feeling the same way Carl had felt when they had pulled up in front of his and Angie’s house. Now that the shoe was on the other foot – his foot, to be exact – it wasn’t as difficult to empathize with his brother.
Taylor sucked in his breath and turned into the driveway. Putting the car in park, he leaned over the wheel and peered up at the front of the house. “Looks quiet. You guys want me to go -”
Carl had already exited the car, rifle out and at the ready. He approached the house, eyes darting from window to window.
Please, God, let them be all right. Let Angie be here and let them be all right. You know how much I hate asking for favors, but I’m asking now.
Taylor walked over to the two car garage. The garage doors were lined with windows. He pointed the flashlight through them. “Van’s gone,” he said. “The truck is here, but no van.”
The front door was unlocked.
They had grown up here. All of their senses were attuned to the house. By the time they entered the kitchen, both of them could already sense that the house was empty.
Carl said, “Forget it. There’s nobody here.” He flicked the lightswitch and the lights came on. “Power works.”
“Must be the backup generator. Dad put it in a few years ago, remember?”
Carl placed the rifle on the kitchen table. “They’re not here.”
“Check anyway.”
Carl explored the house, calling Angie’s name as he poked his head in the various rooms, knowing full well he wasn’t going to find anyone.
“Where the fuck could they be?”
“Do you think she would have left another note?” Tina said. “I thought maybe she might have left one like she did at the other house.”
“Where would they have went?”
Taylor tried the phone. No dial tone, which wasn’t at all surprising.
“Why wouldn’t she leave a note?” Carl said. He rummaged through the papers, bills, and receipts that were scattered across the countertop in the corner. “If those things had been breaking in, I can see them having to make a break for it, but there aren’t any signs that that happened. Nothing’s broken. It doesn’t make sense. Angie wasn’t that scatterbrained. Not like some of the chicks
you’ve
gone out with.”
“Thanks,” Taylor said.
“You know what I’m sayin’.
Shit!
”
Tina said, “Is there anywhere else she might have left it? Someplace she might have chosen where she knew you would look for it?”
Carl thought about it and after a moment his eyes lit up. He rushed out of the room and up the stairs, and Taylor and Tina heard a door being thrown open.
“Found it!” Carl had a yellow sheet of paper in his hand when he came down the stairs. “She left it in my old bedroom, stuck to the desk. I didn’t go all the way in when I looked before, so I missed it.”
“Well,” Taylor said, “what does it say?”
“There’s not much. She must have been in a hurry. All it says is ‘Your dad said we’re going to the mountains. He says you will know what that means.’ That’s it. Oh, and ‘Love, Angie.’”
“Do you know what she’s talking about?” Tina asked. “What mountains?”
After some thought, Carl snapped his fingers and threw his head back, chuckling to himself.
“What?”
“No wonder she wasn’t more specific. She probably didn’t know what the hell Dad was talking about when he said they were going to the mountains. You remember where we used to go camping when we were younger? It’s been seven or eight years, but do you remember? Dad would pack us up some weekends and tell us we were heading to the mountains. Thing is, they’re not really mountains. He just called them that. They’re just big rocks, but when we were kids, they looked like mountains to us.”
“Wouldn’t that be dangerous? Being out in the open like that. There wouldn’t be any way to protect ourselves.”
“Those dumb fuckers can’t even figure out how to open a door without breaking it down,” Carl said. “Dollars to donuts they wouldn’t be able to climb up a big rock.”
Taylor and Carl exchanged glances. Taylor led them into the dining room where a large safe stood in the corner. The safe was large enough that it could have housed a grown man comfortably, maybe two if they didn’t mind rubbing up against each other, and when Taylor grabbed the handle he was surprised to find it unlocked.
“For our sake, I’ll bet,” Carl said.