The Becoming: Ground Zero (16 page)

Read The Becoming: Ground Zero Online

Authors: Jessica Meigs,Permuted Press

Tags: #apocalypse, #mark tufo, #ar wise, #permuted press, #zombies, #living dead, #walking dead, #bryan james

BOOK: The Becoming: Ground Zero
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“What’s that?” Gray asked, his voice tinged with curiosity.

“A fully equipped ambulance,” Theo said. “With a working EKG and everything.”

Gray snorted and added a few packages of air-activated heating pads to the cart. “Yeah, that’d be great. You expecting one of us to drop dead on you?”

Theo laughed and shook his head. “No, hopefully not anytime soon, you know? I don’t think I could handle losing you too, not after Mom and Dad.”

Gray’s grinning face went somber at Theo’s words. Theo immediately felt guilty for ruining his brother’s apparent good mood. He looked at the painkillers in his hand silently for a long moment, and then he set the bottle gently in the cart.

“I’m sorry,” Theo said quietly.

“For what?” Gray asked nonchalantly, a faked cheerfulness in his voice.

Theo shook his head and shrugged. “Nothing,” he said simply. “Hey, what do you say we go see if we can find some scissors? I think all eight of us could use a good haircut.”

Gray looked up at Theo and finally smiled again. Theo released the breath he’d been holding. “Some razors too, yeah? I bet the ladies would appreciate that.”

Theo nodded and rubbed a hand over his cheek and chin. “Hell, I think
I
would appreciate it,” he admitted. “Two months of beard is enough for anybody. I’m starting to look like a hobo.”

Gray snorted and punched Theo lightly in the arm. “Theo, you
always
look like a hobo, beard or not.”

Theo punched him back and grabbed the shopping cart. “After the scissors, we’re breaking into the pharmacy. So lead the way, you silly little shit,” he ordered.

Gray smirked at Theo. “Fine, fine. But if you run over my heels just once with that cart, the infected are going to be the
least
of your worries.”

Chapter 18
 

 

Nikola was nervous as she and Avi worked their way to the back of the store, where the electronics department was. She stuck to Avi like glue, even though she didn’t really know Avi and knew even less about her fighting ability or lack thereof. Avi was concerned about her, but she decided not to comment on Nikola’s jitters as they walked through the aisles.

“Do you think maybe we should get a weapon or something?” Nikola asked. “Like a gun or a knife or whatever? I mean, I don’t think my little baseball bat is going to do much if we run into something in here.”

“You know where the hardware department is?” Avi asked.

“No.”

“Do you want to go track it down while I do what Ethan asked us to do?”

Nikola bit her lip and shook her head. “No, not really.”

“Then I think we’ll be okay until we get back outside,” Avi said. She pulled her machete from its sheath on her belt and showed it to Nikola. “And I’ve got this. I think I can deal with one if it comes down to it.”

“Have you ever had to use it?” Nikola asked. She paused to look at the messy racks of CDs. Even Avi stopped to take a quick look. The discs were spilling out everywhere, and Avi resisted the urge to browse through them for something good. They didn’t have space in the van for anything extra, especially not after they loaded their newly obtained supplies into the vehicle. Music definitely qualified as something extra.

“Not yet, but that’s a good thing, right?” Avi asked. She moved to another aisle and stopped at the end, squinting into the dimness and trying to make out what items were stocked there. Then she gave up and motioned to Nikola. “Shine your light down here for me, would you?”

“I don’t know,” Nikola said thoughtfully as she did what Avi asked. “I mean, it’s sort of good that you’ve never had to actually use it. But I know people who would say it’s kind of bad too. Like Remy, for example. She actually gets
excited
if she gets a chance to kill something. It’s kind of scary, really. Especially since she’s so good at it.”

“How many has she killed?” Avi asked.

Nikola shrugged. “Oh, loads. She practically goes out and hunts them down for sport.” She found the two-way radios Ethan requested and pulled several packs of them off the shelf. “She told me that before the others found her, her entire family was killed by the infected.”

Avi frowned and took a couple of packages from Nikola. “Why didn’t they get her too?”

Nikola didn’t look at Avi as she tucked a package under her arm. “Because she wasn’t home. And when she got home, she killed them all,” Nikola explained. “Like, on her own. She was so angry and upset that she just … lost it. Practically tore them all to pieces. It was a miracle she didn’t get infected herself.” She sighed and shrugged. “So the story goes, anyway. I’m not sure how much of it I believe. After that, Remy said she took off and made it as far as Biloxi before she got trapped in an RV with a broken ankle and surrounded by a bunch of infected. She got rescued by Cade and Brandt and Theo, obviously. Normally, Ethan wouldn’t have let her stay with us—so he says—but I guess the fact that she managed to kill so many infected on her own with only a bolo knife and a hunting rifle impressed him or something, because he let her stay. Ever since then, she’s been tracking down and killing as many as she can when she’s able to. I think it’s a revenge thing for her family. I keep telling her she needs to be more careful, but she never listens.”

“How old is she?” Avi asked. She kept her tone casual as she looked around the aisle to see if she could spot anything else useful. The story of Remy and her one-woman war disturbed Avi. She hoped Remy was at least a little discriminating in her choice of whether or not to deal death; it wasn’t like the victims of the Michaluk Virus could truly help their actions.

“Twenty-one,” Nikola answered. She picked up a game console controller and studied the package. “Oh man, I miss video games,” she said wistfully, tossing the package back onto the shelf.

“And you’re … seventeen?” Avi guessed. She motioned for Nikola to leave the aisle, making a move to follow her.

“Fifteen,” Nikola corrected. “I turn sixteen in three months.”

“Where are you from?”

Nikola raised an eyebrow. “Memphis. Are you interviewing me or something? Because I’m
seriously
not interested.”

“Not interviewing, no. I just want to get to know you guys better, that’s all,” Avi said. She stopped at a broken laptop display case and wondered what possessed people in a crisis to steal things with zero usefulness. “I mean, I need to know something about the people taking me into Atlanta, right?”

Nikola shrugged and wandered toward the end of the aisle. “Yeah, maybe so. I’m not exactly happy about going into that city, to be honest. Memphis was hell. I don’t want to imagine how much worse Atlanta is.”

Avi frowned, glancing back behind her as she thought she heard a noise. She shook it off when it didn’t repeat itself, attributing it to one of the others in the store. “Well, don’t you have somewhere else to go? I mean, like, with family or something?”

Nikola paused and looked up at Avi as she pushed her blond hair out of her face. “All of my family is dead,” she said softly. “Ethan … he’s the closest thing I’ve got to a father. I’m not letting him go anywhere without me. My luck would be that he’d never come back.”

Avi looked away from the teenager and nodded in understanding. “I’m sorry. I didn’t mean …”

“It’s okay,” Nikola said quickly. “I mean, it’s fine. You didn’t know. I can understand that.” She gave Avi a reassuring smile and stepped out into the main aisle running down the side of electronics. Avi turned to look down the aisle once more. But she was quickly brought back around at the sound of the young girl’s scream.

Chapter 19
 

 

Remy plundered through a bin of camouflage jackets as she waited for Cade to return with the crowbar for which she’d gone looking. Remy was honestly a little bored; supply missions really weren’t her thing. She much preferred the missions that involved tracking down a group of infected and killing them all.

Cade returned after several minutes, holding a crowbar and several screwdrivers, and she had an odd edge to her voice. “Ran into Theo and Gray in the hardware department,” she explained. “Ransacking hardware for crowbars. Wouldn’t tell me what was going on, though.” She circled the counter and continued, “We should go back by hardware before we leave and get some tools in case we end up breaking down or something.”

“Jumper cables,” Remy said thoughtfully. She leaned against the bin and watched as Cade climbed the stepladder behind the counter again. “Of course, that’s dependent on finding a vehicle that still runs to jump off on, but better to have them than not, right?”

Before Cade managed to ascend more than three rungs or reply to Remy’s statement, a piercing scream erupted not far from their location. It echoed off the high ceiling and the hard concrete floors and spread out across the store. Cade and Remy both froze. Remy immediately dropped her hand to the long bolo knife she always kept with her.

“What was that?” Cade asked. She stepped off the ladder onto the countertop and walked along it in the direction from which the scream had come. Her blue eyes narrowed as she squinted into the dim light cast over the back end of the store. Remy followed her gaze, but she couldn’t see anything in their immediate vicinity.

“It sounded like a scream,” Remy said. Her voice told Cade just how stupid she thought the older woman’s question had been.

Another scream echoed out as soon as Remy stopped talking. Her breath caught in her throat as her ears and brain finally comprehended what she’d heard. “That was Nikki,” she said breathlessly. Cade leaped down from the counter with a gasp of alarm. Remy took the opportunity to snatch the crowbar from Cade’s grasp. Then she took off at a dead run toward the electronics department.

“Remy! Fuck, slow down!” Cade yelled out. Remy didn’t bother to look back. She couldn’t slow down and wait for Cade. Nikola was in trouble. The teenager would never be able to fend off an attack for long, if at all.

Remy could just see Nikola’s head over the short walls surrounding the electronics complex. She spotted Avi as the older woman pushed Nikola behind her. At least the journalist was good for
something
besides putting them all in danger, even if it was merely as a human shield. And there was the infected man, closing in on the two women, moving at a slow, threatening pace as if he were menacing them, raising their fright levels as high as possible before he struck.

Remy gritted her teeth, her dark eyes skimming the short walls for the quickest route around them. She quickly identified the best path. Without breaking stride, Remy planted a foot on the lowest shelf affixed to the outer side of the wall and climbed the three shelves like a ladder. With one, two, three steps, she reached the top and vaulted over the short wall.

Remy performed the leap a little
too
enthusiastically. She threw herself right into the video game display cases on the other side of the aisle. She landed behind the infected man, staggering and colliding with the glass, which cracked under the onslaught. Remy righted herself and raised the crowbar. She brought the sharp hooked end down into the back of the infected man’s neck as hard as she could.

The crowbar’s tip struck bone underneath the skin and was nearly jarred right out of Remy’s hands. She managed to keep her grip and hauled back, pulling the infected man away from her two companions. She could hear Cade’s footsteps running up behind her as she dragged the man to the floor. Remy freed her crowbar and raised it once more. Before she could strike, the man’s hand closed around her ankle and jerked. Remy fell backward to the hard floor, and the wind rushed out of her lungs.

Cade was still approaching. Nikola was still screaming. Remy coughed, trying to get her lungs working, and kicked to dislodge her ankle from the man’s grasp. She rose to her knees and tightened her grip on the crowbar. The man reached for her again, but she wouldn’t allow him to get his hands on her. With a last swing, Remy slammed the crowbar into the center of his forehead, crushing bone and sending the hook directly into his brain.

The man’s thrashing stopped as the metal met brain tissue. Panting, Remy scrambled to her feet and took a quick step away from the body. She looked up at Nikola and Avi; both watched her with wide eyes. Remy wrenched the crowbar free with a vicious twist of her wrist. Blood and gray matter splattered onto her boots, dripping from the hook to the floor.

“You guys okay?” Cade yelled as she reached them. She jumped over the dead man on the floor and went straight to Nikola and Avi.

“Y-yeah,” Avi stammered. She still gripped her machete, holding it before her defensively.

Remy rolled her eyes and tossed the bloodied crowbar to the floor with a loud clatter. Then she drew her knife from its sheath on her belt. She looked past Avi to Nikola. “Honey, you okay?” she asked calmly.

“I’m okay. Wow, Remy, that was pretty badass,” Nikola said, impressed with the woman’s heroics.

“Thanks,” Remy said appreciatively. Running footsteps came at them from two different directions. Remy tightened her grip on her knife and whirled around, raising the weapon, ready to fight. She lowered it as she saw Gray and Theo coming from the left, Brandt and Ethan from the right. “Took you guys long enough to get here,” Remy said.

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