Authors: Mark Campbell
Up on the perimeter wall, triple the normal number of FEMA
officers patrolled the scaffolding, keeping their eyes on the marauders in
the distance.
The marauders had established a small tent encampment some
distance away, covering it with camouflaged military netting to protect
from a sniper’s scope. It wasn’t clear how many were inside the
encampment. Only a few fires could be seen throughout the night, and
barely a sound was heard at all. It had been an eerily quiet stalemate.
Nobody from the marauder’s encampment attempted to contact
the FEMA camp, and nobody from FEMA ventured to check on the
marauders.
The temperatures rose and the people lined in front of the dining
hall grew impatient. They argued with each other and multiple brawls had
broken out. The police had a hard time keeping the isolated situations
contained while monitoring the group of marauders in the horizon.
Officers wielding riot batons walked along the line, shouting at
people to stay in line and be quiet. Others patrolled with wheelbarrows.
When they come across somebody who had fainted, they scooped the
person up, dumped them in the wheelbarrow, and carted them away.
A couple of expressionless Eyes stood on the empty gallows.
Andrew was not one of them. The Eyes stood with their hands behind
their backs and would casually point someone out in the line from time to
time. The poor souls who got pointed out quickly got black bagged by the
police and hauled away, screaming.
Police officers stood by the mess hall sally port and let twenty
souls in at a time. They then waited for twenty to exit. The people who
left looked absolutely stuffed and satisfied.
After hours of waiting, Jerri was next. She felt giddy with
excitement and couldn’t stop salivating. Deep in her stomach, she felt
something she couldn’t quite describe. It felt ominous yet distant. It was
like being chased by a lion that was thousands of miles away.
Jerri hurried inside, delighted. Still, she couldn’t shake the feeling
that something was wrong; like Teddy did in prison, she chose to ignore
the gut feeling.
I
t was a chaotic mess inside the dining hall. Every table was
filled to capacity. Not a single word was spoken amongst the
malnourished crowd as they feasted on the food piled on their plates. The
sound of teeth gnashing, lips smacking and meat being torn apart filled
the mess hall with a primitive, macabre ambiance. Discarded bones, and
mounds of trash covered the floor faster than the orderlies could clean it
up. Police officers walked between the tables, watching the group gorge
themselves.
At the back of the mess hall, warming trays were turned on and
piled high with generous portions of pork. Cooks handed out plates in a
hurried frenzy to those gathered around the warming racks. Some held
their hands out for a plate while others simply grabbed handfuls of meat
and ate it where they stood, pulling the fat apart with their teeth.
Jerri ignored the odd feeling in her stomach and sniffed the air.
Aside from the scent of body odor and sweat, she could smell the roasted
pork and it was amazing.
Jerri took her bounty and hurried to her usual table. She sat
beside a man who had his elbows on the table as he stuffed his face,
protecting his plate with his forearms. A woman sat on Jerri’s other side
and was sticking her tongue into a broken bone, lapping out the marrow.
She picked up the meaty slab off of her plate and savored the
aroma. It was an undercooked rack of ribs, a premium cut. She tore a rib
off; it was tender and tore away easily. As she was about to take a bite, she
noticed that the meat was stained with a purple mark.
Frowning, she picked at the stain with her fingertips.
The stain was deep in the flesh.
Great
, she thought,
the first real meat I get in months and it’s tainted.
She thought about eating it anyway, but then she remembered the
medical situation. Eating undercooked pork was bad enough but why
should she make it even more risky by eating tainted meat? If she got
food poisoning in the camp, she would most likely die.
Her expression sunk and her color paled as she finally saw the
picture as it formed before her eyes like one of those old 3D stereogram
books she read when she was a kid.
Jerri stepped out of the sally port with a sour expression. She
found herself standing near the same two guards that were posted when
she went inside. The sun was starting to set and the noise outside had
quieted down. A few people were still standing in line. Others were
familiar, more than likely trying to go back in for seconds.
Jerri’s face was blank and expressionless as she hurried back to
her dorm. She brushed past countless wandering souls milling around in
the tent encampment. Their bellies were bloated and their skin had color,
but they looked perturbed. Now that their hunger had been abated,
boredom started to set in. There just wasn’t any way to win.
Andrew quickly looked away and stopped walking. He got into a
quiet back-and-forth discussion with the other Eye and then pointed
down one of the alleyways.
With his companion distracted, Andrew walked towards Jerri and
stood next to her. He stood close enough to talk to her, but far enough
for others in the distance to not know that they were talking.
“I checked in your dorm, you weren’t there for most of the day,”
Andrew said, rocking on his heels with his hands in his pockets. “I
thought I told you to stay low and inside the dorm. It’s not safe out here
right now…”
“What are you going to do, cut down every enemy with your
knife? Are you a swordsman all of a sudden just because you have a rusty
old blade?” Andrew whispered.
“Maybe because I don’t want to see you black bagged,” he
snapped back. “I don’t know if you noticed, but the population has grown
smaller around here in the last twenty-four hours.”
Jerri didn’t respond and kept her eyes on the ground.
“Did you eat any of the…” Andrew started.
Jerri closed her eyes and didn’t respond.
“Never mind, it isn’t my business. Look, we can’t talk out here,”
Andrew said once safely out of earshot. “Head back to your dorm. I’ll
meet you there in a little bit.”
She felt guilty, taking it out on someone who has been nothing
but decent to her. Even though she didn’t fully trust him, she didn’t mean
to snap at him.
“One of my many enduring qualities, I’m afraid,” he said. “Look,
just please be at your dorm... We need to talk about your friend. We may
have to leave sooner than expected. We have barbarians outside our
gates.”
As Jerri neared her dorm’s sally port, she saw that a new person
had taken up residency in Teddy’s tent. The man was very thin, pale, and
had huge bloodshot eyes.
The man scoffed.
“What’s it to you, bitch?” the man asked, arranging his knapsack.
“Get out,” Jerri said.
“No,” the man said dismissively, amused even.
She got the response she wanted. Needed.
Jerri drew her knife and flicked the blade open.
The man’s eyes grew wide with fear.
“Whoa! Easy! Just chill for a minute!” the man said, putting his
hands up. He stared at the blade and his eyes lit up with recognition. He
smiled and pointed at her old knife. “Hey… that’s one of Teddy’s!”
“He’s a friend,” she snapped, keeping the blade raised.
The man looked down and nodded.
“Yeah… he was my friend, too. Old coot sold me a solarpowered CD player. I guess I never will get the CDs he promised me. I’m
going to miss him…” the man said, choking back a tear.
Jerri lowered her blade…
“Was? What happened to him…?” she asked timidly.
The man looked up at her with bereavement in his expression.
“They black sacked him… last night… Something about
suspicion of theft around the camp” the man said, tearing. “Teddy was no
thief. All they saw was an ex-con though.”
Jerri collapsed onto her hands and knees and started to vomit,
creating a puddle of creamy bile in the middle of the sally port. She broke
down into tears, sobbing deeply, loudly.
The red light flashed.
The shower head made a noise and spewed out black smoke.
As she walked into her room, some semblance of normality
settled in. She walked over to her wall collage and stared at her countless
magazine ads. Teddy found most of the old magazines for her and
bartered for some of the other pictures she wanted. When she first came
into the camp, she didn’t have much except for a trash bag full of clothes.
If she could go back and bring something from her old apartment, it
would be a picture of her family.
She was ashamed to admit it but Mitch was feeling more and
more like an ex-boyfriend and less like the plague victim he was. She cried
for days when the white-suits tore him away from her and took him to
another part of the evacuation center after he tested positive for the PT12 infection. After a year, it seemed like she didn’t have any tears left.
That a part of her was finally moving on.
She was just glad that she didn’t have to see him turn.
Jerri went over to her dresser and got a change of clothes. She
opted for the khaki BDU pants and a black shirt. It worked for her; she
was never much of a dressy type of girl anyway.
“Knock, knock,” Andrew said with a smile. He reached up and
touched a clump of singed hair on his head. “What a hunk of junk…
Damn fire-spitting deathtrap. I’ll put a work order in tomorrow and make
sure it gets fixed personally. How’s your friend?”