Authors: Rhiannon Frater
“Charlie,” Ruben said softly, barely a whisper.
Charlie looked at him slowly. The boy’s face was pinched and a little gray. The food they had salvaged two days before had been bad. They were all a little shaky still.
“Wazzup?”
Ruben crouched down next to the nineteen year old. He had eight years on the boy, but he felt old and fatherly toward the younger man.
“Time to go,” he whispered.
Charlie looked slowly toward the Senator, then back at Ruben. “Gonna wake her?”
“No.” The word was said softly, firmly and with conviction.
“Okay,” Charlie answered, slowly sliding off the windowsill. He stood on still shaky legs and took a deep breath. “Is it right? To leave her?” His voice was soft, but the emotion was thick.
“I listened in on her last conversation with Central,” Ruben said oh so quietly. “Everything she’s been saying is bullshit. They aren’t telling her to find a safe location for pickup. They’re telling her they ain’t gonna get us.”
Charlie pressed his lips firmly together and in the moonlight his eyes glistened with tears. He was an East Texas bayou boy. All he wanted to do was get home to the swamps. Ruben was from south San Antonio. He wanted to go home, too, but he knew that there was nothing left. Central had given Charlie hope and Ruben had just killed it. He felt like a shit doing it, but they had made enough mistakes.
“We left those people in the mall…” Charlie whispered, his voice catching.
“We saw the smoke. But we kept going…”
“I know. We fucked up,” Ruben said softly.
Charlie lowered his eyes, then nodded. “Yeah.”
“Look, kid, we stay with her, we die. You saw what she did to Raleigh. She’ll do it to us. We’re her fucking bodyguards. She doesn’t give a shit about us,” Ruben said firmly.
Charlie sighed, then picked up his backpack very quietly. “I know. I just wanted to go home.”
Ruben nodded and grabbed the boy firmly by the back of the neck and pressed his forehead to the boy’s. Behind them the Senator snored loudly.
“I’m gonna get you to a safe place. I promise.”
“The fort?”
Ruben sighed. “No. We fucked up like the devil and we’re cast out of paradise. We gotta find another place.”
The younger man looked fragile in the light. Like a ten year old. He reminded Ruben of his younger brother and it hurt like hell. Without another word, they crept across the floor, careful not to make noise, then stealthily down the stairs. The zombie infestation was minimal in this town, but they carefully looked out the windows before unbolting the door. Stepping out into the cool spring air, they moved toward the truck.
A zombie lurched out from the shadows, uttering a low moan startling both of them. Its rotting hands reached for them as its yellowed teeth champed together. Ruben stepped forward it and firmly cold-cocked it with his rifle. It fell to the ground, still moaning. Ruben brought the rifle butt down again and silenced the fiend.
Charlie slipped into the driver’s seat of the truck and flung his bag in the back. It held a few possessions, but mostly ammo for the hunting rifle he had picked up a few towns back.
Ruben also slid into the truck and shut the passenger door.
“Where are we going?”
Ruben stared down the silent street. A few zombies staggered through the gloom, washed gray by the moonlight.
“West.”
Charlie nodded. “Okay.”
The truck roared to life and moved down the road a block before the headlights flipped on. It moved faster, zombies bouncing off its grill, then it turned a corner and was gone.
Meanwhile, the Senator snored on.
1. A Beautiful Day Gone Wrong
Travis glanced out of the helicopter window down into the lush hill country and slightly smiled. It was beautiful now that spring was fully spread over the land. Trees were radiant in their coats of leaves and the wild grass flowed like rich green water over the hills. Cows ambled down country roads while deer frolicked among the overgrown orchards. A few horses were racing across a field with wild glee, free of human restraints.
“Beautiful, huh?” Kevin grinned over at him. “A gorgeous April day.”
Travis nodded and adjusted his headset slightly. It was uncomfortable but it was the only way to hear anyone above the roar of the helicopter. “I wish Katie could see it. That the world is still alive.”
“She will. Things are getting better for all of us,” Kevin answered. It had been weeks since the last zombie had been seen around the fort. Of course this didn’t stop the constant reinforcement of the walls or the defensive traps being put in place. Catapults were up on the walls now, giving the fort a medieval feel. Large bins were full of all sorts of heavy trash to lob at any invading zombie horde. The walls were higher now and topped with razor wire. The new areas were being reinforced. Everyone, including children, were being given regular training to defend themselves. Someone nicknamed the fort “Sparta.” After seeing a five year old spearing a zombie dummy over and over again, it somehow seemed appropriate.
What a bizarre world to bring a child into, yet, they had to move on. Live on.
“I know that,” Travis said after a long moment. “I know things are better. But it’s hard not to look back and mourn all that we have lost.”
“How is Katie doing about Jenni?”
“She won’t talk about her anymore. She’s doing great with the pregnancy and we’re fine. Jenni is a topic we can’t address at all.” Travis rubbed his chin and sighed. “I miss Jenni, too, but they were out there on their own for awhile and that really bonded them. Katie is taking her loss very, very hard.”
Kevin’s expression was sad and understanding. “Yeah. After awhile you feel you can’t lose anymore or you’ll lose yourself.”
Thinking of Katie and her radiant smile, Travis silently agreed. He couldn’t imagine a world without her. The feel of her soft hair, the kiss of her lips. In every way he completely adored her. If he lost her…
It killed him to see Juan working so slowly, but so diligently on his small memorial garden for Jenni. Juan was not only in physical pain, but he was emotionally hurting in a way Travis could only imagine. Yet, what Travis imagined was so painful, he couldn’t fathom what the reality must be like. Juan had to live that reality.
Juan joined them for the Thursday night poker games, but he seemed a muted version of himself. He still laughed and joked, but his expression was haunted. Rosie told Travis that Juan just needed to find something to live for. Maybe that little garden was it. At least, for now. Slowly, the helicopter banked over the ranch the fort had reclaimed and Travis caught sight of the cowboys riding their horses alongside the herd of cows. They were moving them to a reinforced pasture surrounded by a new high fence.
“This is really amazing. We’re really doing it. Building the new world,”
Travis said in awe.
“Yep,” Kevin grinned. “We are.”
“As long as-”
“Don’t jinx it, man!” Kevin gripped his arm and gave him a stern glare.
“Don’t say anything to jinx it. Just enjoy it.”
Travis laughed, then inclined his head. “You’re right. You’re right.”
The helicopter finished its pass and headed back toward the fort on the hill.
2. Daddy One
It started slowly as all love stories do.
It started with one lone man working long hours on a small garden in a corner of what had been a construction site. Day by day, he toiled slowly and painfully. His long curly ponytail fell over one shoulder as he worked and he rarely looked up as people strolled by.
Silence is what he craved and silence is what he received. Everyone seemed afraid to talk to him and he was relieved. He didn’t want to talk about her.
His Jenni.
His loca.
His heart and his love.
So he toiled on the memorial garden, the last thing he could give her. True love comes slowly, they say.
In Jenni’s case it had hit him so hard he had never seen it coming. Just one day it was there and it was good. He had relished every moment with her. In his mind’s eye he could see her laughing until she fell over in a heap or dancing with wild abandon to some horrible song. Then there were the quiet times when she lay in his arms and her smile made this life beautiful and good.
Now she was gone and he could find no beauty around him. Everything was gray and dark.
So he was planting flowers for her. Something beautiful to remind him of her beauty.
When he had started his little endeavor, Charlotte’s strict rules ringing in his ears, he had felt he would never love again.
He was wrong.
Working hard one morning, a shadow fell over him. He did not look up. Most of the time he was working with tears in his eyes and he did not want to reveal them to anyone. This time was no different. He did not look up.
“Whatcha doing?”
“Planting a memorial garden.”
Standard reply. Standard neutral voice.
“What does that mean?”
The voice was tiny. Female.
“It’s for those who died. To remember them.”
“Oh.” A long pause. Then, “My Mommy and Daddy died.”
Hesitating, he looked up slowly.
A blond girl around eight or nine years old stood above him. Her long blond hair trailed around her face and her eyes were so dark and vivid, they reminded him of Jenni. Holding tight to the girl’s t-shirt was a little boy around four or five and another girl maybe around six. The little boy had masses of dark hair and big chestnut brown eyes. The second girl was blond with clear blue eyes.
It was the three children Jenni had given her life for.
Juan had been avoiding them for weeks now. He had seen them wandering through the fort, always looking a bit lost, three little waifs. Peggy tried hard to take care of them, but the three children did not speak to her or anyone else. The oldest occasionally would ask a question, but mostly they drifted through the fort like tiny ghosts.
Juan didn’t know what to say. At times, he could barely stand to look at the three children. He almost hated them. They were alive because Jenni had died.
The little boy leaned down and began to gently run his fingers through the earth at the base of the freshly planted violets.
“I have a lot of work to do,” Juan finally said.
“Can we help?” the oldest one asked.
“No, no. I don’t think so.”
The middle child, her lips pursed, gently ran her fingers over the features of the face of the Virgin Mary statue. “She’s pretty.”
Juan felt a sense of panic coming over him.
The oldest girl squatted down and began to dig another hole. A whole tray of flowers were waiting to be planted. They had been salvaged from yards around town by Linda and Bette for him.
“We used to do this with our Mommy,” she said finally.
Juan felt a lump in his throat and fought not to cry.
The children clustered around him, already finding things to do. The middle child began lay bits of pink granite in a little row along the walkway Juan had already laid down. People had been writing the names of their deceased family members on each stone. The oldest girl began to work at planting the next batch of flowers while the little boy diligently helped.
Unable to speak for fear of crying, Juan let them be and kept to his work. Their tiny presences made him angry. Jenni had died to save them. They were here because she was gone.
“What is your name?” the little boy asked in a hushed, raspy voice. As far as Juan knew, this was the first time the boy had said anything to anyone.
“Juan,” he managed.
“One,” the little boy said with satisfaction.
“No. Juan.”
“One,” the boy said with a small smile.
Juan started to correct him and then thought differently. The boy was talking and that had to be important.
Despite his agony, despite his pain, he let them be. To his surprise they were good little workers. When he came out the next day to work, they were waiting for him. He hesitated, not sure if he could deal with their presence another day, but finally he relented to their tiny smiles. They worked hard around him, sweating, getting dirty, talking in hushed voices, but they were determined to help. A few people came by and tried to get the children to talk, but they refrained, drawing close to Juan as if seeking his protection.
Once more, he felt angry and wanted to scream at them and make them flee, but he couldn’t.
So they worked on together.
Every morning he found them waiting for him. Peggy would make sure they had breakfast and had work clothes on, but otherwise left them to Juan’s supervision. They called him One and would ask him countless questions about the garden, but when others would speak to them, they fell silent.
Slowly, his anger faded and he began to enjoy their company. The garden began to look lush and beautiful with its red brick walkways edged with pink granite and the plethora of blooming flowers.
“I like bluebonnets,” the oldest girl, Margie, told Juan and tickled his nose with one.
“And why is that?”
“Cause they’re pretty,” she answered with a laugh and rolled her eyes. Juan just smiled.
He began to have lunch with them and then breakfast. They began to laugh and tell him stories. Every night when they went inside to be with Peggy and her son, they would hug him and give him kisses on his cheeks. The pain slowly lessened inside and he found himself smiling. One morning, as a helicopter ascended into the sky, he found himself seated in the completed garden. The bench beneath him was cool and the breeze was fresh. The three little ones came and sat on the bench across from him, all three smiling.
“We decided that you are now our new daddy,” the oldest informed him. The other two nodded, smiling wide happy smiles.
Flustered, Juan said, “You did? Why?”
“The lady with the black hair told us,” the eldest answered. The other two nodded.
“Which lady?” He already knew the answer in his heart.
“The lady from the mall. The nice lady who took care of us after Mommy got…” the girl hesitated. “You know.”