Ragnarok Rising: The Awakening (Book One of The Ragnarok Rising Saga) (33 page)

BOOK: Ragnarok Rising: The Awakening (Book One of The Ragnarok Rising Saga)
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“All clear,” she yelled.

“Get back inside and button down,” I yelled, then grabbed the mic. “829 to Daniels. You are clear to exit. We will be at the door in twenty seconds.”

“Copy,” was the reply.

Seconds later, I was stopping next to the door. Southard came bouncing up behind me. Sergeant Daniels came out, and behind him Rubin and Corporal McDonald were leaning on each other. Sergeant Daniels was limping badly as he climbed into the back of the Humvee, while McDonald and Rubin got into the Bronco.

“You call for a taxi?” I asked as Sergeant Daniels got inside and shut the door.

“First time I’ve ever seen a Humvee taxi,” he said, grinning. “Shouldn’t this thing be yellow?”


Up-armored Delivery,” I quipped. “Sorry we’re a little over-due.”

“Wylie,” he said.
“I would kiss you right now if you weren’t so damned ugly. Thanks for the rescue.”

“Hey, I’m not saying you weren’t out of the way or anything, but it took some doing to get here.
We damn near didn’t make it, on more than one occasion.”

“Well, I’m glad you did
,” he said, patting me on the shoulder.

“So am I,” said Maddie.
“Now let me get a look at that leg.”

“Sarge,” I said, “no offense, but you make one
UGLY
librarian.”

“You should see me with my hair in a bun and glasses on,” he replied, grinning.

“No thanks,” I said. “I’ll pass. Let’s get back to the jail.”

 

Chapter Thirteen
The Long Way Home

 


If an injury has to be done to a man it should be so severe that his vengeance need not be feared.”

- Niccolo Machiavelli

 

While Maddie took a look at the Sergeant, I started trying to figure the best way back to the jail.
I didn’t want to re-trace our path here, since that would take us back past the Catholic Church and any possible extraction teams that might still be on the ground. I definitely didn’t want to run into any of them. Even if they didn’t outnumber us, it would be a safe bet that they would outgun us. Possibly several times over.

“Cover me, for a sec,” I said to Spec-4.

She hopped out the passenger door while I went out the driver’s. I started checking the area around us with the binoculars. I couldn’t get a very good view of the roads to our north, so I climbed up on top of the Humvee. From that vantage point I could see the intersection at James River and Campbell. It was completely blocked with traffic. There would be no getting through that way. What was worse was that there was a large crowd of zombies trying to get through the mess of traffic and heading our direction.

“Looks like we’ve got
a few hundred zombies making their way towards us,” I said.

“Probably attracted by the gunfire,” said Spec-4.

“Yeah, that would be my guess, too. It’s not a problem though. We’ll be long gone before they get here.”

I turned and glassed the road to our south.
I could tell that Campbell was pretty much blocked all the way to the next major intersection. I believe the road was called Plainview. Going that way would be possible, but not easy. Going back through the creek might not be a good idea, either. The embankment would be harder to climb from this direction, maybe impossible. When we came off of the opposite bank and into the creek, we dropped nose first into the water.

“I don’t think that we’ll be able to get back across that creek, from this direction,” I said to Spec-4.

“Yeah, I remember,” she said. “We pretty much fell off the other side of it. We’d better find another way back.”

“There’s a gun store to the south of us.
If we go that way, we might be able to scavenge.”

“Do we have the room?” said Spec-4.

“Damn it, probably not. But I’ll go this way when I get my family. I can hit it then. Take everything I can, that way I’m not taking away too many supplies from the jail.”

I started sweeping the area south of us, again.
The zombies that were near the apartment complex were mostly milling around west of that intersection. There were quite a few moving in and around the cars. Even though there were a lot of abandoned cars, I could see openings where I could either squeeze or force my way through. Our only hard part would be the intersection at Campbell and Weaver.

“We go south,” I said.

I tucked the binocs back into my rucksack and climbed down off of the Humvee. Spec-4 continued to cover the area as I walked over the where Southard was parked. He rolled down the window as I approached.

“So what’s up?” he asked.

“I think we’re going to try going south.”

“South to the next road or south to the lake?” he asked, smiling.

“Damn it, Chuck,” I said, frowning. “You know how bad I want to go get them. I have to get everyone to safety, first. Every time it looks like I have a window to go, something else comes up. I have to convince myself that they’re safer than we are.”

“I’m sorry, Wylie,” said Southard.
“I didn’t mean anything by it. I was just messing with you. I know you’re going to go for them. Hell, I’m coming with you. They’re probably safer than any of us, anyway. The boat idea was pretty damned smart.”

“I hope so,” I said.
“I spent so much time restoring that old thing, I’m glad it’s finally paying for itself.”

“Have you tried calling them, lately?”

“I tried last night and again this morning. Phones are out. No signal at all.”

“Same with mine
,” he said. “Can I ask you a question? And I want you to tell me the truth.”

“Anything, Chuck,” I said.

“What was the deal with all of those bodies, back there at the church?”

Then it hit me like a ton of bricks.
I felt like I was going to be sick. Chuck had sent his wife and kids to the Evac-center. How could I tell a friend that his wife and two daughters may have been executed by the very Army we both served in? How could I not tell him? But, I didn’t know for sure. They could have gotten out on one of the flights. He told me that they were waiting on a flight, maybe they made it out. In my heart, I knew they didn’t.

“Chuck…” I stammered, unsure of what to say next.
“That guy you shot was an M.I. Colonel. He said that this was now a Containment Zone. No one in or out.”

“Yeah, we heard that yesterday,” he replied. “The guy in that helo told us that when we left the National Guard Armory.”

I had forgotten about that. It seemed like so long ago, now. So much had happened in the last two days.

“Well, Chuck,” I said.
“That’s what they did to contain us.”

Southard looked confused for a few seconds, but I could see it on his face when he realized what I meant.
The color drained from his face and he seemed to almost shrink into himself.

“Wylie,” he managed to say, his voice thick with emotion. “Please tell me that doesn’t mean what I think it means.”

“I’m afraid it does, Chuck,” I said, softly. “But we don’t know when they did it. Melodi and the girls could very well be in Texas right now. We have no way to know for sure.”

Chuck let that sink in for a second, emotion raw on his face.

“What does your heart tell you?”

“That they’re gone,” he said flatly
, tears in the corners of his eyes. “They killed them.”

“But we don’t know that for sure.”

“Yes, we do. Do you know how long it would have taken to kill that many people?”

“Quite a while,” I said.
“They could have left yesterday, before it all happened.”

“W
e both know that they would have cancelled all out-going flights once it was classified as a containment zone,” he replied, his tone eerily calm.

“We don’t know for sure when the containment order was given,” I said, trying desperately to find some hope.
“We just don’t know.”

“Come on, Wylie,” he said.
“They killed all of those people to contain something that they can’t fucking contain. They’ll kill all of us before they let us leave.”

“They can try,
” I said, anger rising in my voice.

“Come on,” he snapped, anger rising in his voice. “They won’t come fight us.
They’ll bomb us. We won’t stand a chance.”

“We don’t know that, either,” I said, “I’m not giving up.
Not now, not ever.”

“I should have sent them to the lake with your family.”

“Chuck,” I said, a little harshly. “Don’t do this! Keep it together! You can’t do that to yourself. We just don’t fucking know what’s going on. They might be fine, we might be fine. This isn’t over yet!”

Southard looked at me blankly, blinking his eyes rapidly.
Then he took a deep breath and sighed.

“Ok, Wylie,” he said, looking down.
“We’ve got to get through this. I understand that. But…”

“I know,” I interrupted.
“I know, Chuck. If there’s any way in the world, we’ll find out what happened. Find out the truth. And we’ll make them pay for what they did, too.”

Chuck nodded once, and then closed his eyes for a second.

“I’m with you, Wylie,” he said, solemnly. “To the end.”

“Good,” I said, “Because I need you.
I can’t do this alone.”

“Guys!” shouted Spec-4.
“I hate to break this up, but we’ve got contact coming in from the north. ETA less than two minutes.”

“Let’s move out,” I said, not just to Chuck.

“I’m right behind you,” he said. “I’ve got your back.”

I nodded to him and turned for the Humvee.
I could see what Spec-4 was talking about. The zombies had gotten through the traffic near James River far faster than I thought they would. Close to a hundred of them were less than fifty yards on the other side of the parking lot, and closing. The leaders, made up of
Sprinters
, would be here well before the rest. Nearly thirty
Sprinters
could do some damage, both to us and to our ammo supply.

I ran to the driver’s side and jumped back in.
Spec-4 was already locking her door. I fired up the engine and put it in gear. With a quick wave at Southard, I headed out of the parking lot and south down the outer road. Southard followed suit, sticking close enough to me that we wouldn’t get separated. When I reached the intersection by the stoplight, I knew that trying to go out onto Campbell was a complete waste of time. There were just too many cars clogging the road. So, instead I continued on down the outer road.

There was construction going on in this section of the outer road, but I drove through the road closed sign and continued on.
The little bridge on the outer road was undergoing some renovations, but it wasn’t demolished. I had to go around some heavy equipment, but the road was clear all the way to the next road. It was only a small side road, but had been heavily blocked with traffic.

From there, things were going to get dicey.
The intersection was pretty much blocked, but I could see where there were only two cars between us and the other side of the outer road. That was where I was going to force our way through. I slowed down and rolled up to a little green four door. I could see that there was still a body inside. It moved as we pulled right up to it. It was a zombie, still buckled into the seatbelt. I named them
Grabbers
.

It turned and tried to reach us, but was trapped inside the vehicle.
My guess is that someone was bitten and tried to get away, either to get to a hospital or just to run. This was as far as they made it. It was a shame, too. She might have been attractive in life. Now, she was just another zombie that wanted to dine on our flesh. Once our bumper made contact with the side of her vehicle, I mashed the accelerator to the floor. The big engine roared and the wheels started digging in.

I didn’t want to just ram it, for fear of damaging the Humvee to the point of not being able to drive it.
So, I kept pushing and the car started sliding to the side. Once I had pushed it beyond the line of traffic, I turned the wheels slightly and shoved it into the ditch. It slid into the grass and soft earth and rolled over onto the top of the vehicle. The zombie was still inside, comically hanging upside down…but still trying to reach out and grab us, with single-minded tenacity. Then we were clear.

Once I
straightened out, I accelerated on down the outer road. There were cars along this side, but nothing completely obstructing the road. I hit several zombies that tried to get to us, and kept right on going. A zombie does absolutely no damage to an Up-armored Humvee when the two collide. Southard stayed right behind us, like a running back following his blocker.

I slowed down near the strip mall at the top of the hill.
There was a gun store at the back. We didn’t have room to take on any additional supplies, but I needed to know if it was worth coming back to. I shot into the parking lot and into the midst of about ten zombies. I considered avoiding them, but thought that Southard might get bogged down by them. Better to knock them aside for him.

After blasting through the knot of zombies, I headed to the back of the lot.
Sitting at the end of one arm of the strip mall, the gun store stood there like a bastion. Bars on the windows insured that even the most determined zombie was not getting inside. It worked pretty well on looters, too. Well enough that the place looked intact. I put that bit of information away for future use and headed back out to the road. A quick smash through another knot of zombies and we were back onto the outer road.

“So,” said Spec-4, grinning. “How are you planning on getting past the bars?”

“Tow chain attached to the bumper,” I replied, without thinking.

“That should do it,” she said. “Are you sure you’re not a criminal?
You came up with that awfully fast.”

“You planning on robbing a gun store?” asked Sergeant Daniels, from the back seat.

“Robbing is such a bad word,” I said, chuckling. “Since everything has gone to hell, I think of it more as aggressive shopping. I’ve been putting a lot of thought into this, lately.”

“Good point,” he said.
“I don’t think that normal rules apply anymore.”

“I’d agree,” said Maddie.
“With the dead walking the earth, I don’t think that the usual rules of decorum and etiquette apply.”

“How’s the Sarge?” I asked Maddie.

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