Winchester Undead (Book 2): Winchester: Prey (13 page)

BOOK: Winchester Undead (Book 2): Winchester: Prey
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As Bexar reached the motorcycle, he noticed his right pant leg was turning red with his blood. He was thankful he parked so close. He wasn’t sure how much further he could have jogged, as bad as his leg hurt. He sat the gas can on the ground and looked at the motorcycle, blinked hard a couple of times and stared at the back of the bike. There was no sissy bar, he had no bungee cords, he had no way to quickly get the gas can attached to the motorcycle. The sound of scraping rocks and the approaching moans brought Bexar back to the present. He peeked around the sign and saw the approaching mass of undead bodies.

“FUCK!”

Bexar climbed into the saddle, started the bike, and rode back the way he came, the gas can left on the side of the road. The peaceful morning ride to Lajitas now became a pain-filled angry return ride in the mid-afternoon sun. After the previous weeks, Bexar still wasn’t sure how long a group of undead would follow after they lost sight of their prey. He hoped they wouldn’t follow for long. Bexar headed towards Terlingua and his family, the day’s mission a complete failure. He would have to ride to Alpine or Marfa next; he had to keep trying, and he couldn’t think that he wouldn’t be able to find a replacement vehicle at all. Bexar didn’t know how much longer they could remain hidden from the bikers if they stayed so close to the park.

CHAPTER 29

 

Fort Bliss, Texas

February 16, Year 1

 

Chivo glanced out of the windows near the Rod & Gun Club’s small restaurant; the sky over the eastern mountains glowed orange with the approaching dawn. Lindsey and Apollo were still asleep. Chivo wished he could have slept longer, but with only two of them, they had to split the night watch in half. Neither of them trusted Lindsey with the task of keeping a security watch; besides, she desperately needed a full night’s sleep after being stranded over the highway for so many days. Besides the ammo, next to the rotting kitchen, they found the dry goods storeroom with two cases of bottled water and a case of Gatorade. They were in desperate need of water and were thankful for the lucky find, even though the smell of the rotted food and the lingering smell of death from the previous occupant still turned their stomachs.

Chivo kicked Apollo’s boot, waking his teammate before kneeling next to his head and whispering, “I need to set up the coms and see if we can reach anyone. I’m guessing it might take me half of the morning to click through our freqs and also check some of the back channels. I really have no idea who might still be listening on the other end.”

Apollo agreed. “Yes, if we can’t reach anyone, we need to raid some of the homes across the tracks for food. Actually, we might need to do that anyway. Also, we need better transportation and more fuel. I don’t trust the Humvee not to break and the gas mileage is horrid.”

“Right. Well, come give me some cover while I get our coms setup.”

Chivo and Apollo shouldered their rifles, leaving their heavy packs behind, and crept out of the back door towards where they’d left the Humvee. Frost covered the plants and tables on the range, but there was no sign of any movement. The only body they encountered was the one they’d killed the night before, which still lay by the back door.

Reaching the Humvee, Chivo opened the back door and retrieved the case with the radio. A few feet away from the big truck he opened the case, connected the handset, and set up the antenna. The radio powered up and the battery showed a full charge just as it did when they’d left the small warehouse the night before, but both men had field experience during which radio batteries decided it was time for an early retirement without any warning.

Chivo punched in the first set of frequencies, took an educated guess at the line of sight for the communications satellite that should be overhead, and began a process of broadcasting and waiting multiple times before moving on to the next channel in his memorized list.

The door behind them burst open. Apollo spun around, immediately raising his rifle, and saw Lindsey running towards them crying. Apollo lowered his rifle and she ran straight to Apollo and started hitting him. “I thought you two assholes left me! I woke up and was all alone, you dick!”

“I’m sorry. We needed to set up the radio and attempt to make contact. We have to be outside to do it and I thought you needed the sleep.”

Lindsey stopped hitting Apollo and sat down next to Chivo, her face wet with tears. Apollo raised his eyebrows at Chivo, who looked over his shoulder at him. Chivo shrugged and went back to his task.

 

Groom Lake, Nevada

 

After the meeting and the stark news of Lance’s death, Ben Wright walked back to the radio hut, the airman accompanying him. They had a big task ahead of them; they needed to prioritize the list of known survivors for their needs, what sort of supplies they could be provided or if they needed to be evacuated. Then, they had to plot those groups in terms of the C-130’s effective fuel range. There would be no inflight refueling now, if ever again, and the thought of landing on an unknown airfield in an attempt to fuel the aircraft just did not seem like a good idea.

Wright was also tasked with finding where the SUV with the RV had gone in Texas, which could be miles and miles away from the previous spot by now and in just about any direction. The tasks themselves were not unusual in Wright’s professional experience with the Air Force. What was unusual was the complete lack of manpower he had to accomplish it.

Wright looked at the map on the wall, colored pins spread out across Middle America. “Any of you guys remember the operating range of a C-130?”

“I think it’s about two thousand miles lightly loaded, sir.”

“OK, so roughly nine hundred to a thousand miles out so it can make it back, with light winds at altitude.”

Wright took his compass, spread the legs to the scale on the map for a gap of one hundred miles and ticked off ten spots from Groom Lake and made a mark on the map. With a piece of string he drew a circle from Groom Lake and that spot across the map. Nearly half of the pins lay outside of the circle and outside of how far they could fly.

“You don’t happen to know how much fuel it carries, do you?”

“Yes, sir. Almost eight thousand gallons.”

Wright turned around. “OK, Mr. Dean, how and why do you know that?”

“Memorized all that stuff when I was a kid. Always wanted to go into the Air Force. Made models of all sorts of aircraft and practically wore my VHS of
Iron Eagle
out from watching it so many times.”

Wright smiled. The airman was nearly ten years his junior, but as a child of the 1980s, Wright knew what it was like to be pulled to the Air Force from watching
Iron Eagle
. The first one, at least.

“How long would it take to put that much fuel in the tanks?”

“You got me on that one, sir.”

Wright looked at the map again. They would have to figure out which fields they could fly to and refuel. They needed to know how long it would take to fuel the plane and how heavy the concentration of undead was in the area. The fuel pumps were probably electrically operated and non-functional, so they would have to figure out a way to power them. The task seemed insurmountable, but they had to do it. First, though, there were survivors in the circle who needed help.

Wright pushed the speaker button on the phone next to him and punched in a four-digit extension.

“Cliff, go ahead.”

“Cliff, Wright. How soon do you want to send a mission?”

“As soon as we can. Get Arcuni topside. Tell him to take the PJs with him for security and get a fuel truck to the Herc. In fact, new rule: after landing from a mission, refuel the plane in case of a priority rescue mission.”

“Will do. Do you want a supply drop or a rescue for the first op? I think we have good candidates for both now, both within the plane’s flight range.”

“Both if you can. We have a lot of fuel stored here, but it isn’t an infinite supply. Besides, with each flight, we take a risk breaking something on the plane that we won’t be able to fix. The more we can do at once, the better.”

“Right. Once we have the op logistics planned, I’ll give you a brief, and I assume you’re taking care of the tactical side?”

“Yes, well, sort of. I’m not going outside the wire on this one. The PJs will take care of the tactical side of the op. Get with Arcuni. He could probably use a hand up front and you’ll need another guy to act as a loadmaster. I’ll brief the PJs on their roles and send them to you for the details. You get with Arcuni and figure out the rest of the crew.”

Wright pushed the speaker button and ended the call, finishing up the barely legible notes scribbled across the yellow pad of paper on the desk.

“Guys,” Wright said, pointing to the map on the wall, “try to make contact with anyone in this circle. See if any of them are in desperate need of food, ammo, or gear and see if any of them need an evac. List them in order of needs and check the overheads for any airstrips that can handle the Herc near their location—which is how long, Dean?”

“Uh, four thousand feet or better to be safe.”

“OK, four thousand feet or longer runways. Civilian fields are OK, but they need to be close to the survivors. Either we have to go get them and bring them to the field or they have to get to the field. For supplies, we still have to land. We don’t have the rigging for an air drop, nor do we have anyone who knows how to rig it. We’ll have to land and offload ourselves. Once you have that list, plot them to see if we can hit more than one of them in a single trip. We are limited to daylight ops, and Cliff wants the first op wheels up as soon as we possibly can. I’ll be back in ninety minutes to check on progress. Oh, and check for undead concentrations near the fields.”

Wright looked at the clock and figured they had about ten hours until sunset. “If we can be wheels up in four hours, we can fly out to a location in range, in time.”

“Major, are we allowing for night landings here, or do we need to be back here before local sunset?”

“I don’t have that answer. We have to check the lights up top to see if they work, but I think we can.”

Wright started out the door and stopped. “One of you figure out if one of the weather birds is still in orbit and still working. We can’t send Arcuni into a damn storm.”

The door shut behind him and the room erupted in activity.

CHAPTER 30

 

Marathon, Texas

February 16, Year 1

 

“I don’t see any signs. I don’t think they got shit in this town.”

The three men with leather vests drove through the small-town streets, dodging walking corpses. “Damnit, the sign says Alpine is that way. Is that town any bigger?”

“Not really. Turn around. We have to drive to Fort Stockton.”

The motorcycle club prospect who was driving turned the old van around and headed to Highway 385. He lit another cigarette off the burning end of the one he already had in his mouth, burned nearly to the filter. His gaunt face and his eyes were wild, typical of someone addicted to crystal meth. The back of the van smelled strongly of burning marijuana and gasoline fumes. Five plastic five-gallon cans of gasoline sat at the very back of the van. The thought that it might be dangerous to smoke with so much gasoline in the back of the van never occurred to the three of them, but not much ever did.

Next to the gas cans sat a crate half-full of blocks wrapped in brown paper labeled “Peno,” with an orange diamond-shaped warning placard. There was also a box with a small label indicating it held blasting caps, a box labeled as M60 Igniters, and a spool of green cabling.

The desert highway was mostly deserted, with only a few abandoned cars and an oil field truck that the van swerved around at close to eighty miles per hour. It was still well before noon when the van crossed the railroad tracks and ran the stop sign to turn onto West Railroad Avenue, continuing the northern route.

“Turn here. Something has to be on business I-10.” The van lurched left and onto West Dickinson Boulevard. The trio traveled a few blocks before the driver slammed on the brakes and turned into a parking lot of a small pharmacy. The pharmacy was more general store than medical supply, and the front window was full of merchandise.

“Bingo.”

The driver left the engine running and the three piled out of the old van. The driver carried a shotgun, the other carried an M4 rifle, and the third held a large military-style duffel bag. The driver walked up to the front door. It was locked, so he broke the glass out. All three of the men took deep breaths. The interior smelled stale but it had no smell of death, so the three climbed through the broken glass. The customer windows at the back of the store were blocked with a pull-down gate, but three quick shotgun blasts gave the three entry into the secured room via the employee door.

Ten minutes later the duffel bag was heavy with large bottles of Xanax, Viagra, and Vicodin, and every package of nasal decongestant the store contained. When they climbed back through the shattered glass at the front of the store, they found the running van had attracted six undead with the noise of the motor. The driver picked up a large rock from the parking lot and threw it through the other large window at the front of the store. The loud crash of the shattering glass drew the undead’s attention, causing them to shamble away towards the van, leaving the van clear for the three bikers to climb in. Before the walking corpses could turn and follow, the old van drove out of the parking lot, a black cloud of exhaust pouring out of the tailpipe.

“How much did we get?”

The man in the back of the van lit a cigarette and sorted through the bottom of the duffel.

“Enough for one batch, maybe.”

“Shit, we need a bigger store.”

“We need a bigger town.”

“We need that fucking Walmart,” the man in the passenger seat said, pointing at a sign further up the road.

Nearing I-10, the van pulled into the Walmart parking lot, which was choked with abandoned cars. Undead shuffled through the parking lot.

“Shit man, I’m not going in there.”

“No way. Lead them off and we’ll blow the drive-through window.”

The driver drove slowly through the parking lot, honking the horn, while the front passenger cranked down the side window and yelled at the undead crowd. Every rotted face in the parking lot turned to look at the van and then the dead lurched into motion, following as quickly as they could.

Hundreds of undead followed the van out of the main parking lot exit and into the street. The driver accelerated sharply, turned right, and made the block around to the rear of Walmart, then to the side of the store where the pharmacy drive-through window was located. A car sat abandoned at the window, empty with the passenger door open. The three quickly put the car in neutral and pushed it out of the way using the front bumper of the van.

The man handling the duffel bag opened the back of the van and pulled a handful of the brown paper-wrapped blocks out of the cardboard box. Unwrapped, the blocks looked like off-white modeling clay but were really civilian C4 explosives stolen from a mining operation near Buffalo, Texas. He handed off the explosives with a roll of duct tape to the driver, who taped four of the small blocks on the corners of the thick bulletproof glass of the drive-through window. Next, the spool of green cord was unrolled, four lengths cut, ended with blasting caps and shoved into the soft explosives. The three made quick work of rigging, and forty feet away, they attached one of the M60 Igniters, hiding behind the other side of their van before firing the explosives.

The explosion knocked the three men to the ground and shattered all the windows of the van. The ringing in their ears blocked out the approaching moans of the undead. Peering around the damaged van, they could see the drive-through window was missing, and there was a ten-foot hole in the exterior wall. Brick and shattered glass covered the ground.

They stood shakily, feeling dizzy, but once they retrieved their dropped weapons and the duffel bag, the three of them staggered into the large pharmacy. Walmart’s much larger stock of the drugs they wanted quickly filled the duffel to the top. To carry out the rest of the over-the-counter pseudoephedrine, they filled six plastic shopping bags. The club was set for a good while with all the meth they could cook from this haul.

The three of them were inside the building for only five minutes, but stepping back into the sunlight, they were met by more undead than they could count, some already tripping through the rubble and towards the gaping hole in the wall.

The driver shot the closest walking corpse with the shotgun. Its rotting head vaporized into a cloud of black diseased mist. The man with the duffel bag over his shoulders and the plastic bags in his hands stayed back, letting the other two take care of the approaching death. The man with the M4 pushed the selector switch past fire and to three-round burst, jerking the trigger back and firing wildly while walking towards the van. He was immediately swarmed and brought down by a dozen undead clawing at his skin; he screamed in pain while their rotted teeth tore chunks of flesh from his arms, neck, and face.

The driver kept pumping his Remington 870, firing the 00 buckshot as rapidly as he could work the action, until an audible click echoed in his ears. Another four undead pulled him to the ground, the shotgun clattering to the pavement. As he brought his hands to his neck, blood sprayed the rotted faces of the zombies ripping into the warm flesh.

Fear overwhelmed the man with the drugs. His hands were frozen shut holding the shopping bags, the duffel bag still on his shoulders. He ran. He ran as fast as he could past his screaming buddies, who were finding death one painful bite at a time. He kept running until he dove headfirst into the open rear doors of the van and pulled the doors closed against the clawing blackened hands of the hungry dead, their rotted fingers crushed between the closed doors. He clambered swiftly into the driver’s seat.

Glass fragments on the dash blew into his face as he drove through the mass of dead bodies in the parking lot. Black smoke blew out of the exhaust; the gasoline sloshed in the cans next to the box of explosives. An undead whose hand was crushed in the rear doors was dragged along the pavement. As the van accelerated, the undead’s arm ripped at the elbow, leaving the forearm stuck in the door. The prospect lit another cigarette and drove the old van as fast as he could towards Big Bend and his club.

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