Yesterdays Gone: SEASON TWO (THE POST-APOCALYPTIC SERIAL THRILLER) (Yesterday's Gone) (46 page)

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Authors: Sean Platt,David Wright

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BOOK: Yesterdays Gone: SEASON TWO (THE POST-APOCALYPTIC SERIAL THRILLER) (Yesterday's Gone)
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They landed softly and he let go of her, though reluctantly. They were surrounded by thousands of light bugs, which kept a respectable distance away from them, as if solely there to provide light for them.

“What is this?” she asked, walking in a circle around the swing set, staring at it as if it were made of magical candy. She looked at the light bugs with a smile that lit up her face.

“A swing,” Luca said, with a smile.

“No, I mean this place,” she said with a smile. “Is this real?”

“Are you warm?” he asked, taking a seat.

“Yes,” she said.

“That’s all that matters then,” he said, kicking his feet out and setting the swing into motion. The swing’s chains squeaked and the set moved slightly up and down with each motion. Rebecca took the opposite seat and kicked her feet out too with a big laugh.

“This is so weird!” she said. “You did this, all of this, didn’t you?”

“I dunno,” Luca said, not wanting to call attention to the things that made him different. “Let’s just swing.”

**

Luca wasn’t sure how long they’d been swinging, but it seemed like a good while. She told him about her sister, Alexis, and how her mother hadn’t always been so mean, or scared.
 

Luca talked about his family, Will, and a lot about Dog Vader. He got sad talking about Dog Vader, so he changed the subject to the rest of his friends.

“Is she your girlfriend?” Rebecca asked of Paola. “She’s soooo pretty.”

“No,” Luca said, feeling weird talking about Paola with another girl. Luca looked up at the sky, noting how the stars looked a bit different than usual, though he wasn’t sure how. Perhaps he had dreamed them into being, as well.

Looking at Rebecca, as she told her story, Luca felt incredibly sad for her. She’d been through so much, and he wanted to make her happy. But what could he do? If he tried to get her out of the box, they people would surely further punish her, and him. He tried to remember how his dad made his mom happy, and then an idea came to him.

“Hold on a second,” he said, hopping off the swing.

He walked past the light bugs and into the snow, towards the trees which surrounded them, and thought a rose bush into being. The bush sprouted from the snow, pushing up, and growing within seconds, sprouting perfectly red flowers.

He picked one and then thought the thorns away, and they were gone.

He walked back to the swing holding the flower, and outstretched his hand, “Here. I know it’s not much, but at least you can be happy here. For now.”

She hopped off the swing, and stared at the flower, tears in her eyes, a smile on her face. “It’s the most beautiful thing I’ve ever seen! Nobody has ever given me flowers before.”

They stood awkwardly, like two young teens who didn’t know what to do or say next. He wondered if he should hug her, when she leaned forward and hugged him.
 

Her hug was warm and felt so good and so real, he never wanted the moment to end.
 

Luca felt butterflies stirring in his belly, and giddy.

Suddenly, his arms were empty.

Luca opened his eyes and she was gone.

“Rebecca?”

She didn’t respond.

The light bugs scattered all at once, looking like a million candles flying apart and flickering out, casting the world into darkness.

Snow began to fall down upon the protected haven and cover the ground with increasing speed as if making up for lost time.

The swings vanished.

Someone was watching him.
 

At first, Luca couldn't tell who it was, but he saw a shadow in the snow, about 20 feet away. Luca had to get closer and closer, until he could almost smell him – the man from a few nights before. The Dark Man; the Man in the Middle, standing behind the rose bush.

The Man in the Middle should have scared him. Luca was pretty sure he was born inside of the Terrible Scary. But for the first time, Luca wasn’t really afraid at all.
 

The Man in the Middle was wearing all black – pants, shirt, and a big long coat like he’d seen cowboys wearing on TV. He was holding something in his black gloved hands, but it wasn’t until Luca was standing a few feet away that he could see what it was – a large red rose, but different than the one he had picked for Rebecca, which was now gone, with her.

The rose looked like it had a million petals, and its deep color looked like blood against all the white of the surrounding snow. When Luca was only a few feet away, he could hear The Man in the Middle saying, “She loves me; she loves me not,” as he pulled petals from the bud, then released them to the wind where they fluttered slowly into the flurry, then floated to the carpeted snow like droplets of blood.
 

“It’s you,” The Man in the Middle said.
 

“Do you have a rose for me?”
 
Luca said, even though the question made no sense to him, like one of those things that happened in dreams. It was as if her were following someone else’s script, even though the words came from his mouth.

“Of course.” The Man in the Middle reached behind his back and produced a second red rose, with even more petals and none of them picked.”

“Thank you,” Luca said. He took the rose and started to pick the petals, one by one, adding fresh drops of blood to the new fallen snow. He said, “She loves me; she loves me not,” just like The Man in the Middle.

They picked their petals together in silence, the cold wind stinging their cheeks, neither one afraid. Luca was about to leave to look for Rebecca when he said, “You’re sharing the snow right now with all of us, right?”

The Man in the Middle looked down at Luca, and said, “She loves me not.”
 

* * * *

BORICIO WOLFE: PART 2

In the woods

March 25

early morning

Boricio stared through the binoculars, watching the snow cover the sloping roofs of the houses below, the place his gut told him that his team had gone to. There were no signs of Charlie, Adam, Vic, or Callie. But it made sense that they’d be down there. It was warm and looked like the safest place Boricio had seen in a while. If they were making a break from Team Boricio, this seemed like the best bet for the four of them.
 

He almost couldn’t blame them for leaving. But he was pissed as a motherfucker that they hadn’t thought to come get him. And to come
here
, of all places? To the enemy camp?

What, do they think they’re too good for me? They don’t want Boricio socializing with their new friends?

Either way, the trip wouldn't be a waste. Even if Chucky Fuckup wasn’t down there letting Adam give him the old reach around, since Callie wouldn’t, the odds were solid that Boricio would find something to fuck, even if not Callie. Now that he’d had a taste of fresh pussy, or not so fresh in Jenna’s case, he was like a fatso off his diet.

Boricio tossed the binoculars into his backpack, then wrapped a scarf around his neck and pulled a wool hat over his head, just past his ears. He turned the pistol around in his hand, taking a long while to drop it in the trunk, along with the bag full of weapons, he would come back to get later.

He tossed his keys into a hole in a nearby tree, and covered the Z8 with a white tarp, where it was concealed well enough behind a thick wall of trees.

Boricio trudged through the snow toward the compound, until he found the road which led to the wrought iron gates in the distance. Every step thickened the new feeling inside him, a feeling he didn’t know but liked a whole fuck of a lot. It was like walking into a dream, wide awake.

He’d been watching the place for hours, and hadn’t seen one person he recognized. He hoped they wouldn’t recognize him, either. And if they did, oh well. He’d gotten out of there once before.

Boricio reached the entrance to the compound and stood in front of the gate, staring at the letters carved into the stone wall: “The Sanctuary.”
 

Even with the bitter wind biting the skin from his face, Boricio couldn't help but laugh out loud.
 

Ain’t no sanctuary in the world with enough solace to save it from Boricio.

TO BE CONTINUED. . .

YESTERDAY’S GONE

EPISODE 11

(FIFTH EPISODE OF SEASON TWO)

“THE LOOPHOLE”

Copyright © 2012 by Sean Platt & David Wright. All rights reserved
 

Cover copyright © 2012 by David W. Wright

Edited by Matt Gartland at
Winning Edits
.

http://winningedits.com/

This is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, businesses, events, or locales is purely coincidental. The authors have taken great liberties with locales including the creation of fictional towns.
 

Reproduction in whole or part of this publication without express written consent is strictly prohibited. You are, of course, free to use short excerpts from the book for the purpose of review. We can’t do much to stop piracy, and we don’t enable digital rights management because we don’t want to restrict your enjoyment of this book or keep you from sharing it with a friend or two. However, we’re indie authors, and put a lot of our time and money into creating what you see here. Therefore, we would appreciate if you paid for your copy, or those you wish to give to others, so we can keep writing books for you.

The authors greatly appreciate you taking the time to read our work. Please consider leaving a review wherever you bought the book, or telling your friends or blog readers about Yesterday’s Gone, to help us spread the word.

Thank you for supporting our work. You rock!

Visit:
http://SerializedFiction.com
 

eBook Edition - February 7, 2012

REVISED: March 25, 2012 to fix typos including instances of incorrect capitalized “Rs”

Layout and design by Collective Inkwell

CollectiveInkwell.Com

Published by Collective Inkwell

* * * *

“JOHN”

Kingsland, Alabama

The Sanctuary

March 25

9:06 a.m.

“It’s coming.”

The creature that was once John started its morning as it had each day, meditating in the middle of the man-made room, sucking in the soured air and reaching beyond the gates to speak with the best parts of him – the parts that crawled through the forest, waited in the mountains, and lingered in the shadows beyond The Sanctuary.
 

John
smiled wide at the long awaited message, finally delivered by fraying fragments of his self, lingering in the shadows and oozing like oil over his thoughts.
 

“It’s coming.”

John
was growing stronger by the day, and his new strength was making the old patience even more restless. He could end them in a flood of fury, before they had time to blink in disbelief. The man who called himself “The Prophet” believed them all safe, here in their laughably named “Sanctuary;” this man was foolish enough to think that his “God” would somehow keep his congregation safe inside a self-proclaimed holy land.
 

The Prophet’s “holy land” was hollow. The only thing keeping his congregation safe was
It
,
 
or
John
as
It
was named in this mortal disguise. The humans would breath their soured air as long as
John
allowed it, and not one second longer. The Prophet’s archaic god had nothing to do with their safety, but everything to do with how easy it was going to be for
John
to slaughter all his little lambs at once.
 

For now, the human gathering served
John
well, fencing them inside, too blind to see the bars that their “protection” had built around them, too thick to bend or break.
He
allowed it, encouraged it, fostered the illusion of safety by having his legions of darkness strike hardest whenever doubt about the The Sanctuary’s safety began to bleed through its walls.
 

Yesterday, he had to kill two. Today, he might need to kill another.
John
could sense the doubt threading itself through the seams of the woman, Mary, and her flock.

He
should have killed them all back at the hotel, should never have allowed their strength to build, even if it was only a whisper compared to his inevitable scream.

But he couldn't kill them all, not then and not now. Not without damaging his connection to Luca. And that was something he simply couldn't afford to do. The boy was more than powerful, he was preordained.
 

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