Read Zombie Fallout 4: The End Has Come and Gone Online
Authors: Mark Tufo
Tags: #Horror, #Zombies, #Fiction, #Lang:en, #Zombie Fallout
Marta was shivering uncontrollably even under the small mountain of blankets that Alex, Paul and Erin had gathered for her. Alex was pacing around the bed as Erin administered a cool damp paper towel to Marta’s forehead.
Erin
directed her statement more to Paul but it was meant for Alex also. "She's burning up."
"What did she mean 'worse' Tommy?" Paul asked Alex. "Tommy's on our side, right?"
Alex looked over to Paul, his eyes tortured with pain.
"Is she being used like Justin was?" Paul asked hesitantly.
"The creepy kid?" April asked as she brought more wet towels for
Erin .
"That can’t be it," Alex pleaded. "We know Tommy. The kid is always smiling.”
"My husband used to say 'Never trust anybody who smiles all the time, they’re up to something,'" Mrs. Deneaux said, throwing her two and half cents into the fray.
"Guess your husband never had to worry about you then," Paul said meanly.
"Paul!"
Erin
said.
"No, he's quite right," Mrs. Deneaux said, nodding towards Paul. "I always thought of smiling as frivolous behavior and my husband appreciated that right up until he decided to sleep with his secretary."
"Alright, way too much information," Joann finished. "I think we need to start figuring out what to do. I can feel the heat coming off of Marta from here. We should probably get her some antibiotics or something. And if Tommy is in her head and if, I'm stressing IF, he is on the other team now, are we in danger?"
"Well, I think we're always in danger," Mad Jack said.
"No existential
crap
please," Joann moaned.
"Sorry," MJ said, "I just thought it was worth saying."
"You know what I meant, all of you," Joann said. "How much more danger are we in now than we were twenty minutes ago?" That question hung somberly over their heads. Alex and Paul both had family that they were trying to get home to. The rest had thrown their lot in with them thinking they would be safer being away from a zombie homing beacon. Now that fundamental premise was being questioned.
"Go then!" Alex shouted. "It's what you’re all thinking, we've already done it once, what's another time? Your soul can only get stained so many times before one transgression becomes indistinguishable from the next!"
"Nobody said that," Paul said, trying to diffuse the situation.
"No one needed to say it Paul," Alex answered, his earlier anger ratcheted down a notch.
"I was thinking it," Mrs. Deneaux said. Paul shot her a fierce glance. She didn’t so much as flinch. "Oh, you can't be that naïve Mr. Ginner. Altruism is a wonderful trait, it truly is, but it is for the misguided. Why should one risk their own life for that of another with no promise of significant gain for the action?"
"Real humanitarian you are," MJ spoke up.
"Pah," Mrs. Deneaux spat, waving her arm at him.
"How much time do we have?" April asked as she looked towards the front door.
"That's the ten thousand dollar question, now isn’t it?" Paul responded distractedly.
"No matter what decisions we come to," Joann stated, "I think we need to get Marta some medicine first. Who's in?"
"Me," MJ replied, raising his hand, “but only if we stop at a Radio Shack too."
"Me too," April said, looking over lustfully at MJ who for the moment was not paying her any attention.
"I'm in," Paul stated.
"Paul,"
Erin
said. Implicit in that one word was the question, 'Why do you feel the need to risk your life and leave me here?'
Paul shrugged his shoulders as if to say, 'Look who's going, someone has to watch out for them and it might as well be me.' Paul laughed a little; sometimes being married was a trip. They had just had an entire conversation, mostly unspoken.
"I will go too," Alex said dejectedly.
"No, you will stay here my friend, by your wife's side," Paul said, placing his arm around Alex' shoulder. "It'll be fine," he added hollowly.
"You really believe that?" Alex asked, calling him out on his statement.
"I have to," Paul answered him. "What's the alternative?"
"Fair enough, but hurry up or I'm going to throw Deneaux outside on her ass," Alex said with a small smile.
"What's the cut-off point?" Paul asked, looking at a non-existent watch.
"I'm going to lock the door on our way out," MJ said.
"That would be wise," Alex told him.
"That means you'll be locked in," MJ said as if he was talking to a five year old.
"I think he gets it," Paul said, grabbing MJ before Alex had the chance to lose his cool again.
"I just wanted him to be aware of that,” Alex heard MJ say as Paul led him away.
Mrs. Deneaux walked over to the far side of the store to the recliner section, and with a loudly audible sigh sat down in an oversized EZ Boy.
"I think her fever's breaking,"
Erin
said excitedly as she pressed her palm to Marta's head.
Marta's eyes fluttered open as she uttered one word. "Demonio."
Alex made the sign of the Holy Trinity.
Erin
looked questioningly over towards him. "Demon," he offered in translation.
"Got it,”
Erin
answered with a shiver. Marta's eyes closed as a more restful sleep ensued.
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
– Ron - Searsport
As soon as Ron got home with his dad,
Nancy
took the kids to get them settled in. Their initial fears of being in a new place were put quickly at ease by Nancy as she got them cleaned up, fed and showed them where they could sleep. For now she set up a bunch of sleeping bags and pillows in the family room in the basement. She had a hunch that, at least at first, they would feel much more comfortable if they were all within arm's reach no matter how much testosterone the three boys pretended to throw around.
"They going to be alright?" a wiped out Ron asked his wife as she came up the stairs.
"As all right as any kids can be when they lose their parents,"
Nancy answered him solemnly. “I had hoped Meredith would come home with you,"
Nancy commiserated as she placed her hand on Ron's arm.
"Me too," Ron said, using his other hand to try and wipe the exhaustion from his features. Ron related all of the events that had transpired throughout the day. As he wrapped up, he thought that he most likely should have glossed over a few of the stickier details.
Nancy was looking a little less hale than she had been a few minutes before. “The old man is a rock," Ron said, referring to his father.
"You've got more of him in you than you know. I'm going to check on the kids."
Nancy needed desperately to take her mind off of just how close to a disastrous end her daughter had come. She was still mourning for one of them. She could not compound those feelings; her soul was already feeling threadbare.
All was quiet as Ron sat on his couch reflecting back on the day. His hands nervously twitched. He did not notice.
"Eagle's Nest, Eagle's Nest, this is Valkyrie," Mike said through the airwaves.
"What is wrong with you?"
Gary
asked, "It's Mount Olympus. You can’t just go making stuff up.” "How many people do you think he has checking in?" Mike asked his brother.
‘More than you know,’ Ron thought as he got up to talk on the handset.
"That's not the point,"
Gary
said a little peevishly. "If you're not going to follow protocol…” "Protocol?" Mike cut his brother off, "Are you
kidd
ing me? Chariots of Fire my ass, I still haven’t forgiven you for ratting me out. You know that moose wasn't my fault.” "Maybe if you had driven a little better…"
Gary
needled his brother.
"You're blaming my driving skills now! Maybe if I wasn't so distracted by your attempt at singing, or whatever you call that…” "Boys!" Ron shouted through the microphone. "Am I going to have to put you two in a time out?” "He could probably use it!"
Gary
shouted. A loud crashing sound immediately followed.
"I've got your time out right here!" Mike shouted to the most likely retreating back of his brother, but over the headset it was deafening.
"Mike! I've already got a headache. It's been a hell of a day,” Ron yelled.
Mike immediately turned all business, "Everything all right?" Mike held his breath waiting for a response. "
Tracy make it back?" Fear was coiled in that question like a compressed spring.
Ron took a breath, he hated lying this big to his brother. Oh, there were times when it was necessary like on the Risk board when he would tell a mistruth about how many turns they would stay allies, but this was of a much higher magnitude, life and death to be exact.
"Ron?" Mike asked, fear threatening to overcome all of his senses rendering him useless.
"She's fine, Mike.” ‘Not so much a lie there,' Ron thought.
"
Whew
,” Mike said in relief. “Can I talk to her?"
"She's sleeping, they had a close call on the way back.” Ron had learned from his earlier revelation to his wife that it was best to limit the amount of details. “She's fine, Mike,” Ron reiterated to stop the next barrage of questions. “As are the kids.” Ron could picture his younger brother wiping the dampness from his eyes as he collected himself.
"Dad, everything alright?" Travis asked on the other end. Ron's vision must have been spot on.
"Good,” Mike choked out. “Just relieved. Your mom is safe.”
‘Dammit.’ Ron thought. ‘Didn’t actually say that.’
"It's a little early for a call in Mike. What's going on?" Ron asked. He didn’t get a sense that there was any urgency to the call but this was not a time in history where assumptions should ever be taken.
"Well, I was calling to check on
Tracy
and to let you know that we're heading south a little quicker than we thought,” Mike told him.
"What's changed?" Ron asked, intrigued.
"We've got reason to believe that Alex, and possibly Paul if they are still together, are now the objects of Eliza's attention.” "What? Did she send you a text?" Ron asked sarcastically.
"Just about,” Mike answered back seriously.
"I don’t even want to know,” Ron told him.
"Probably better off.”
"Are you going to be able to find them? South is a pretty vague direction.”
"I've got an idea, not sure if it will work. Just something I've been thinking about on the fly.” "The last time you thought of something 'on the fly' it cost me three hundred dollars to bail your ass out of jail,” Ron jibed.
"Don’t go getting all riled up, I paid you back for that.”
"No you didn't.”
"
Y
ou sure?" Mike asked. “I'll get right on that when I get back.” "Yeah, a lot of uses for cash these days. Just get your ass back here and we'll discuss repayment.” "I'm not aligning with the Allegiance of Darkness on the Risk board if that's what you have in mind.” "Well, that was partially it, but we can figure something else out,” Ron said smiling now. “Alright, call me when you hunker down for the night.” "Roger that, tell everyone there that I love them.”
"Will do.”
*
Ron waited a minute before changing the frequency. “You catch that?" he asked BT.
"Got it,” BT said.
"You'd better be careful or you'll end up passing him by.”
"That would serve him right if I did and then saved the day, so by the time he got there I had Eliza's head on a pike. I’d be drinking the last ice cold Molson on the planet and he’d get stuck having to kill some crippled ass old zombie and drinking a piss warm Schlitz.” "Umm, still a little pissed that he asked you to stay behind?" Ron asked.
"Does it show?" BT asked seriously.
Ron decided wisely to not answer. “You know the drill. Next time he calls, wait a few, then switch to frequency two and we'll discuss what we want to do going forward.” "What I want to do is kick his…"