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Authors: P. S. Power

Tags: #Horror

A Very Good Man (41 page)

BOOK: A Very Good Man
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  “Heh, well you're doing better than a lot of people. I wouldn't worry about it. Brave is the same as dead anymore, as often as not. Smart is better and if the smart money says be careful, then that should be the plan.”

  The man just grunted at him a little.

  “Easy for you to say.” The man didn't grin but his tone had lightened a lot. It was still soft, because of the wounds, but he didn't seem to be nearly as injured today as the day before when he'd seemed half dead.

  Sammi spit to the rescue?

  Jake finished eating. He didn't want to go back. It really was that simple, wasn't it? He didn't want to and no one could make him. He didn't need them.

  But they needed him.

  Maybe.

  Crap. That part of things was unexpected to him. What had happened to the selfish little jerk living at home off his parents for all those years? He knew, since he'd lived it, but it was hard to believe.        

  That guy had died in the house he'd grown up in and Jake had come into being instead. Maybe the only good thing to come out of the end of the world so far. Jake was a lot better of a person than Mickey Robson had ever been. If they'd met now Jake would have shot that little punk after about fifteen minutes. Lazy, loud and whiny. Only he wouldn't, because Mickey was smart enough to learn to be quiet. Good enough to adapt when he had to. To realize when it was time to work and not worry about himself too much anymore.

  The name was just what popped out of his mouth when he first met Nate on the street. He'd been in shock, walking when he really should have hidden, carrying a gun with him because that's what you did in a zombie attack. It had been what the main character of the video game he'd been playing at the time had been called. Jake Hardkill.

  He'd left the last part off. Mainly because it sounded silly. Hardkill? What kind of name was that supposed to be anyway? Dutch? Gamish?

  Did he owe them anything? He thought about it as he finished eating and moved to wash the dishes in the pan of stove warmed water, scrubbing them as best he could without soap. He did have a scrub brush at least. He had bar soap too, but dish soap hadn't been high on the list of things to look for yet.

  Those people had kind of been his family for months, but then they hadn't been that at the same time. No one there cared for him after all, just what they thought he could do for them. After a while he decided he didn't really owe them at all. He'd have made it on his own if he had too. Or died, also a real possibility, but he wouldn't have done half the dangerous things without other people to protect. The next question was the real one though. Did it matter? Did they still live in a world where the only people you helped were the ones that could do things for you in return? Well...

  Obviously.

  That was pretty much the rule everyone lived by and had been for a lot longer than zombies had been around.

  Was he like that though? That part caught him out and made him feel very small for a while. Would he endanger fifty odd people just because it might make him a little uncomfortable for a while to help them? It didn't sit well with him and he shook his head hard, which got the other's attention. Burt looked a little crestfallen. Sammi just sat and watched him, as if curious about what he'd do.

  “Fine, I'll go back, but I'm leaving this place stocked just in case. It makes a good place to hunt from if nothing else. I want to go on the record here though as saying that I don't like it. I'm doing this for everyone else and if anyone gives me grief, I'll... leave again and take my real share of things from the house. I'll have to, in order to survive if I have to lose time here by going back and...” He'd what, kill them? Whine and complain? Cry at them all?

  It might not even be true he knew, Jake had enough to get by for the winter he thought, even for a few people.

  Luckily the others just made relieved sounds and didn't force him to finish the other part of his half thought out threat. That was good, because he had nothing. They went to bed shortly after that, and if Sammi did that creepy wound licking thing again in the night, she was careful to do it before it got light enough for him to see. She'd made his bed up for him while he was getting the fruit, so he got to sleep like a person and not a refugee that night at least. The sheets were crisp and, if not new, at least clean.

  It took three days for him to move to the main house and that only after some hard talks with Nate and a few others, which included all the cleaning team leaders and Carley. They agreed to his terms, he'd come back and no one would give him any grief over things, they'd treat him like an actual person and everything, even be nice to him. That was the claim at least. Jake didn't buy it and he didn't stay there that first night at all, instead he went and got more brick in town, scavenging bedding and going house to house on his own, cleaning out any undead he found without help. There were a lot less of them now, so it wasn't hard. He had the big cart, so he brought back a stack of mattresses too, when he went back the next day. The weather had turned and everything had to be covered with a plastic tarp. The odd thing there was that everyone that had a garage had at least one of them, normally hidden in the back. When he'd gone to search for the one he was using he'd gotten a big surprise.

  Well, two really. The dusty and dark space didn't have windows, just the light from the door, left open to let in the pale morning light. He barely saw the shambler, but his sudden fear warned him along with the smell. That took two bullets.

  The rest was what he found amazing though. In the back, covered by the very heavy plastic he'd been looking for was an old looking wooden box. A big box, hard to even pick up it was so heavy. Inside the chest were tools. Old fashioned hand tools. They had wooden handles and dust on them, in a box or not, probably antiques. He nearly yelled he was so happy. Of course then Jake would have to kill himself so he refrained.

  Tools. A wide variety of them, hand drills and saws, hammers and mallets and more, things he didn't even recognize at all. The box must have weighed what he did or more, making it a chore to carry to the cart, but he wouldn't have traded for its weight in gold. Not even its weight in women willing to sleep with him. It was like finding a pirate's treasure or something. Only more useful.

  The trip back to the house was a cold trudge in the rain, but he still smiled every now and then.

  Real tools. Heh.

  He kept doing the same thing for a while after that, going and getting materials most days, then he'd alternate for a day or two working on the forge and getting Carley to go with him and a team of people to cut and haul a huge stack of green logs. They'd need them for charcoal Burt had told them. The older man wasn't up to doing much yet, but he walked out and made suggestions on the forge and the space around it, plus a few other ideas he had. They ended up spending a lot of time together because Burt didn't want to be trapped in the house any more than he had to be. Not after having been stabbed there.

  Jake could get that.

  People had been surly and negative toward him when he left, a little whiny and dark, but the events that had happened had really shaken the survivors. Most of the people wouldn't leave the house at all now, unless someone threatened them into it. Even getting them to go out and get firewood for the kitchen had to involve someone looking at the adults menacingly. Sammi just did it, which meant Ken went with her, armed with a rifle now when he went out. It was strange, because if anything the world around them was safer now than it had been before. The danger had all been from within.

  Heather came out too, and tried to visit with him in the forge as he worked with Burt several times, but didn't say much, as if waiting for him to be alone. Jake never was. That, privacy, he missed. For a whole month he had it and now it was gone again. The only time no one looked at him was on the toilet or when he went into town. Worse, the girl watched him. A lot. Not flirtatious staring or anything nice either, just watching as if he were an entertainment. Or looking for weaknesses. Jake ignored it.   Really he tried to ignore all of them as best he could except Carley and Burt. Sammi too.

  Julio, Doctor Julio Mendez, worked daily in the greenhouse and grabbed him the day after the forge was done, and smiling, took his arm and led him to the kitchen where breakfast was being made. A corn mush, heavy and sticky. Sammi knew how to make it. They ate it with a bit of strawberry syrup to sweeten it most days. Jake liked it but a few people complained because it was too bland. Julio pointed at the stove, gesturing to it and then running off a steady flow of Spanish far too fast for Jake to follow. He got fire and hot out of it, but that was about all. Sammi nodded though.

  “He'd like you to find or build him a little wood stove for the greenhouse. He's afraid that it might get too cold when winter sets in, even sharing a wall of the house. He's got a few plants that aren't cold hearty and he doesn't want to lose them.”

  “Oh? Well, if nothing else I can build a brick oven for him for that. I'll see if I can find something ready-made first though, when does he need it by?” Jake smiled and looked at Julio as he talked, remembering not to call him Jose.

  That part was embarrassing when he thought about it. If they had a Russian guy would they have all called him Ivan too? God. Well, all he could do now was try not to do it again.

  The man spoke with the girl for a minute and then she turned back to Jake, “He says that sooner is better. He has a feeling that winter will come earlier than we think and might be colder. He doesn't have a reason for it, but...”

  “But if Julio says prepare for a hard winter, then we do. That goes without saying and needs no explanation.” Jake finished for her, nodding seriously. If the man wanted them to run around the fields naked in the snow they'd do it. A general warning to be careful... Yeah.

  “We'll get with Carley and see about getting some more wood in too then. And... I'll try to find some things in town for insulation, like Burt mentioned? Will you see to getting those up Sammi?”

  She translated that which got a big smile from the smaller man and his hand came out to shake with Jake. One thing about Julio, he was always friendly and polite. Half the other people just tried to pretend Jake didn't exist.

  Everyone had taken some knocks in the last month, that they hadn't expected. So Jake could cut them some slack, couldn't he? It wasn't fun being the bad guy, but people lived in fear all the time now. They had to blame someone and it was hard to blame the zombies. That would be like blaming sharks.

  The cleaners weren't even going out now, they just did little chores around the house and waited, listless and depressed. Gloomy.

  Sad really.

  They needed to work and keep busy, to build things and keep going, doing anything else would probably get a bunch of them killed. Sad meant they'd take stupid risks. That meant putting people in danger for no reason and then Jake would have to shoot them when they got mad and started screaming at people.

  That night Jake asked for volunteers. Or at least he tried to.

  “We need to make charcoal for the forge, Ken and Burt have the bellows done already and I've even gotten some metal in for it and some basic tools from in town that Burt got that will let us make more tools specifically for the task of building more things, convoluted, but it has to be done. Hauling the logs into place, and tending the fire is important. Not hard, but needed. I also want a hunting team to go out again. We should be able to get more meat now, right?” Jake looked at Carl specifically, the man nodded, but didn't say anything.

BOOK: A Very Good Man
3.4Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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