Read After: The Echo (AFTER post-apocalyptic series, Book 2) Online

Authors: Scott Nicholson

Tags: #Stephen King, #Justin Cronin, #Paranormal, #Suspense, #walking dead, #Science Fiction, #Bentley Little, #Supernatural, #Brian Keene, #Dean Koontz, #Zombies, #Horror, #Joe Hill, #zombie, #After series, #post-apocalyptic, #world war Z, #Adventure, #Mystery, #dystopian, #technothriller, #J.L. Bourne, #action

After: The Echo (AFTER post-apocalyptic series, Book 2) (6 page)

BOOK: After: The Echo (AFTER post-apocalyptic series, Book 2)
11.88Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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In case Rachel didn’t make it here.

No, not “in case”…just “until.”

Cathy moaned again and her eyes flickered open. The fire glittered in them momentarily, almost eerily like that of her mutated offspring’s. Then it struck him.

The sun in their eyes…that’s what it looks like. A hundred little suns  in their eyes.

He wondered briefly if she had somehow mutated as well, as if the little creature’s bite marks on her breasts had passed its sick strain into her. But then she blinked and the illusion passed. She was just a frightened young woman, staring wide-eyed at him as if not knowing where she was.

“You were having a bad dream,” he whispered.

He reached out to her but she flinched away. He realized his hand was passing distressingly close to her naked breasts and he pulled away, grabbing the edge of the blanket to slide it over the smooth curve of her shoulder. He gave it a paternal pat as she snuggled down into the blanket.

“Thanks,” she replied, moving the infant so that its head was exposed. So it wouldn’t suffocate.

Franklin kept his eyes fixed on her face. “Who’s Joe”?

Her eyes darted as if she expected to see him in the fire-illuminated room. Then sadness settled over her. “My husband.”

Franklin nodded. He didn’t want to wake the other two, but he wanted to understand her—to understand how someone could betray their kind and harbor the enemy like this.

“Did he…die?” he asked.

“Yes, but not in the burn.” She kept her voice low to match his. “I was a nurse at the Asheville hospital. I was on maternity leave but they were already getting cases of inexplicable behavioral changes, just after the solar storm first reached Earth.”

He didn’t realize she was a nurse. Yes, the new order would need her. Assuming she didn’t waste her talent and skill keeping the wrong types alive.

“And it all happened so fast,” she said. “My husband—Joe—was a police officer. He learned before most people what was happening, so he came home and said we needed to get out of town. I wrapped up little Joey while he packed, and we got in his patrol car. We didn’t have a real plan, but already people were dropping dead, the highways were clogged, everything was going crazy. He thought the parkway would be safer, and we’d just turned on it when we found the road was blocked with wrecks. And then they started attacking us.”

“The Zapheads?”

She nodded. He expected the memory would repulse her and make her shove the infant from her chest, but instead she only cradled it more protectively. “My husband shot three of them, but then they dragged him out of the car and—”

Her voice broke, and even though she swallowed back her sob, it was forceful enough to cause the infant to stir. Franklin reached over its head and stroked the side of the woman’s cheek, her tears wetting the back of his hand.

“We all went through some trauma,” he said. “The end of the world is never easy for anybody.”

Her face clenched and a few more tears glistened on her lashes. “I grabbed Joey and ran. We spent one night in an empty car. I didn’t know where to go. So we just…”

Franklin swallowed hard. The two females in the other bed stirred, and the fire hissed and popped with heat. “When did you know about…the baby?”

“Baby?” She hugged the tiny Zaphead closer. “What about him?”

“That he was different.”

Her eyes grew soulful and happy. “He’s my special boy.”

“Are you…” Franklin didn’t know how to approach the problem. He’d never understood women in the best of times, and under circumstances such as these, he was hopeless.

Then the baby startled, waving its little fists in the air. It made a chuckling sound, as if something vibrated in its throat. Its face was still turned away from Franklin, but he studied it for the first time.

With its eyes closed, it looked just like a human infant—tufts of downy hair, skin nearly translucent, limbs soft and plump. But that disturbing chuckle was like something from an animal, not a human.

Cathy smiled. “He’s hungry.”

Franklin was appalled to realize the infant’s throaty noises were a cry for milk. And even more horrifying was when the young mother pulled back the blanket and brought the infant to one of her creamy breasts. The baby opened its mouth and latched on, and the chuckling died away into a contented purr.

Franklin turned away, trembling. He rose from the makeshift bed and went to the fire. He drove a metal poker into the embers to drown out the horrible moist sound of the suckling.

Maybe the new order wouldn’t play out exactly as he’d planned it.

 

 

CHAPTER EIGHT

 

Campbell lurched and kicked as the hands squeezed his head.

Fingers pressed near his eye sockets and he went wild, bucking as the attacker climbed onto his back and tried to ride him to the ground. He swung his pistol around his side, driving the barrel into flesh. If he fired, the noise might bring the Zapheads back, and this attack seemed like a solitary act.

He collapsed his legs and rolled, hoping to throw off his attacker. He was rising to run when her voice hissed in his ear: “Stop or they’ll hear us.”

Campbell immediately relaxed his muscles and knelt against the forest floor. The woman pressed against him to whisper again, her breath ripe with garlic and wine. “You’re new to these parts, ain’t you?”

“Yeah.” His heartbeat slowed from a gallop to a full trot. “But I’m thinking of settling down. People are very friendly here.”

“Saw you come off the highway. What were you doing following those soldiers?”

“Those were the first people I’d seen in days.
Living
people, that is.”

“Well, I ain’t so sure those soldiers are human beings anymore. They’re acting like they rule the world.”

“With automatic weapons, I guess they do. Why did you jump me, anyway?”

“If I’d have hollered, they might have heard us.”

“But I could have shot you.”

“Yeah,” she said. “That was a possibility.”

Campbell bent and looked through the trees. No sign of movement. “Do you live around here?”

“Got a camper trailer back in the woods. Land’s been in the family for a century.”

“Is it safe?”

“Safe as anywhere. Soldiers haven’t found it yet, and I lay low so the Zappers don’t pay me no mind.”

He had a sense of her in the dark, a woman maybe 40, short and solid and tough. If she’d been seriously attacking him, he would have had a challenge fending her off. But he supposed anyone still left alive was tough in one way or another.

“They took the dead Zaphead,” Campbell said. “What will they do with it?”

“I don’t want to sit in the woods all night and jabber,” the woman said. “Come on.”

She reached out and found his hand in the dark. She tugged him with surprising strength in the direction opposite of the highway.

“I’m going back to the road,” he said. “It’s open so I can see any threats, and I can make better time.”

She didn’t release his hand. “Where you headed?”

“North. To the Blue Ridge Parkway. I heard there was a survival camp there.”

“There are survival camps all over the place. Them soldiers have one. And you could say mine is one, too. Now come on.’

He resisted, and she added, “Just for the night.”

Campbell considered his options. He hadn’t had real human contact in weeks, and now that he had an alternative, he wasn’t sure he could face a night of locking himself inside a stranded vehicle to sleep. “Okay.”

She giggled, a startling sound given the violence and strangeness Campbell had recently witnessed. “Ain’t picked up a man in a long time. And you don’t even know my name.”

Campbell tried to pull his hand away, but she squeezed harder. “Lighten up,” she said. “If I was hunting for a husband, I wouldn’t go after one as skittish as you. Name’s Wilma.”

He let her lead him through the woods. She flicked on a pen light and flashed the narrow beam steadily ahead of her feet, guiding him with a confidence that suggested she knew the woods well.

“Hi, Wilma. I’m Campbell.”

They walked in silence for some minutes, Campbell’s eyes adjusting to the gloom. The green-tinged sky occasionally appeared through breaks in the canopy. “You live alone?” he asked.

“Do now. Where you from?”

“Near Chapel Hill. Me and a friend bicycled out this way, and then he…”

She squeezed his hand again, and he welcomed the sympathetic contact. “Happens to all of us sooner or later,” she said. “Personally, I’m shooting for the ‘later.’”

Campbell glanced around, watching for lights or movement in the shadows. He wondered if the woman was armed, and then decided she must be. Otherwise, she’d have to be crazy to wander around knowing Zapheads and a crazed militia was afoot.

The terrain was relatively flat but now it gave way to a slow incline. The ground was rockier here, and they came upon a wide ditch that featured a trickle of water.

“Cane Creek,” she said. “Good water if you filter it.”

Campbell realized he was both thirsty and hungry. Encountering the troops had disrupted his routine and he hadn’t eaten since midday. “Do you have any food?”

“I know how to make do. There’s a convenience store off the exit ramp two miles up the road, and a little town another three miles after that. I go to the grocery store about once a week. A lot of the food’s gone over but you can always get canned stuff.”

“What I wouldn’t give for a fresh steak.”

“You should drop in at the army camp, then. They barbecue a steer once in a while. Rustling the local livestock.”

“There’s a camp? How many soldiers are there?”

“Six or seven. I try to keep clear of them, but I see them out once in a while, and I hear them shooting.”

“So there are more Zapheads than soldiers.”

“More Zapheads than anything. Is it the same in Chapel Hill and everywhere you’ve been?”

“Yeah,” he said. “Except now the Zapheads are gathering into groups or tribes.”

“You noticed that, too, huh? While us humans all try to go solo.”

Soon the trail widened and gave way to a clearing on a hill. A camper trailer was parked under a large oak tree whose limbs clutched at the iridescent green ribbons in the sky. The home was propped up on cinder blocks, a propane tank sitting on the tongue. The camper’s windows were too small for anyone to crawl through.

“Home sweet home,” Wilma said, fishing a key from somewhere within her bulky clothing. The door had a padlock on it.

Wonder what she needs to lock out?

Campbell glanced into the shadows of the forest, feeling vulnerable in the open. He marveled at how quickly he’d become used to a sky backlit with an unnatural aurora, the lingering effects of the charged particles from the solar storm. “Haven’t you been attacked yet?”

“I don’t have anything anybody wants.”

“Not even the Zapheads?”

“I just lay low and let it all fly over me.”

A tiny yap came from inside the camper. “Hush in there, Peanut,” Wilma said through the door before opening it. She put her hand through to let the dog sniff at it. “It’s me and a new friend.”

Campbell wasn’t sure he was ready for a friend. Maybe he should have returned to the highway, where at least he’d developed some sort of routine. But here was a woman with a pet. It was almost disturbingly normal, although in his old life he’d have considered such a woman poor white trash or an eccentric old witch.

At least she has a dog instead of a bunch of cats.

She ushered Campbell inside and he found himself standing in the cramped quarters as she lit a candle. The camper’s interior was stacked with dried goods, snack foods, and cases of bottled drinks. The little dog that sniffed his trouser leg was a rat terrier with mangy gray fur.

“Peanut, this is Campbell,” Wilma said, pushing back her wild tangle of red hair. He got his first good look at her face. Her freckled cheeks bore large red scars of recent vintage, and a dime-sized crusty scab clung to her lower lip.

He swallowed hard as her stare challenged him to comment. Even her green eyes were sickly, red-rimmed and gummy with mucus. He’d guessed she was middle-aged but now he couldn’t be sure. She might have been twenty with a hundred years of damage and hard living pressed into the clay of her flesh.

He forced his gaze away and knelt to pet the dog. It, too, seemed to be a carrier of afflictions, with one ear torn nearly in half and a viscous goo coating its dark nose. Campbell was bending to pet it when it lifted his head and bared yellow teeth, growling from deep in its throat.

“Hey, Peanut, that ain’t the way we treat company,” she said, giving the dog a light kick in the ribs. “Get on to bed.”

The dog slunk away into a sideways milk crate that featured wadded-up sheets for bedding. The camper held a small table and a bed on a low loft that extended over the trailer’s tongue. A small kitchenette had a two-eye gas stove, but the sink was piled with filthy dishes and empty tin cans. Flies buzzed around the mess. A salted hunk of ham dangled from the ceiling by a piece of twine, huge clefts cut in the marbled meat. Clothes were strewn on every surface.

Wilma shucked her overcoat and tossed it on the table, knocking a candy-bar wrapper to the cluttered floor.

“What do you think?” she said, waving her arm to indicate her home.

Campbell was still taking in the tiny living space, which he estimated to be ten feet by fifteen feet, with hardly a square foot clear of refuse. The stench of stale food, mold, damp fur, and old sweat nearly made him vomit. He suddenly longed for the fresh air outside, even with all the accompanying dangers.

“It’s…cozy,” he managed. He looked around for a place to sit, but decided he’d rather stand for now.

Wilma reached over and flipped a lock on the door latch, then slid a hasp into place and snapped a padlock. “In case they break the window and try to reach the handle,” she said.

Campbell was uneasy about the being locked in, especially given the candle and the amount of clutter. He imagined the place would torch like a wad of gasoline-soaked newspaper. But he calmed himself. If Zapheads attacked, he should be able to fend them off with his pistol, even in close quarters.

BOOK: After: The Echo (AFTER post-apocalyptic series, Book 2)
11.88Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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