Read End Days Super Boxset Online
Authors: Roger Hayden
“You sure about that?” Peter asked.
Brad smiled. “Come with me and we’ll see.”
“I’d rather not,” Peter said.
Rob cut in. “Carlos lost visibility. I just need you to go out there and get eyes on that truck. Take your radio.”
“Sounds like a plan.”
Rob thanked him and looked at the others, speaking with seriousness. “In the meantime, everyone get your weapons and take positions.” The group dispersed with a sense of urgency they hadn’t felt since the day of the EMP strike. Peaceful resolution still felt like an option, but they also knew that things could also go a completely different way.
Rob ran into his cabin and grabbed his Beretta pistol, Ruger high-action bolt rifle, his hunting knife, and Mila’s revolver. He took a backpack of ammunition and left. The booming engine sounded right outside the camp. He ran past Elliot and a dazed Reba as she was being escorted to the Dunne cabin. Once inside, he gave Mila her revolver. Everyone was in the same room now and huddled near the window, trying to look out.
“Get away from the window,” Rob said.
Brad entered and gave Ashlee a quick hug while handing her a pistol.
Rob said, “This will all be over soon. It’s just a precaution.” He turned to go. “Don’t leave this room unless absolutely necessary. If for any reason we have to evacuate, the rally point is at the creek. We’ll meet up from there and travel on foot.”
“You sure you weren’t ever in the military?” Brad asked.
“Nope,” Rob said. “I just read a lot. Pick up on a lot of that jargon.” He turned to give Mila a hug as Josh and Kelly rushed over. “I love you guys. Stay safe,” he said, pulling them close.
“You too,” Mila said.
Brad, Rob, and Elliot said their goodbyes and left the classroom, shutting the door behind them. They left the cabin and rejoined the others. They could see exhaust rising through the trees not far from the camp, where the truck had apparently stopped.
“Not sure what the hell they’re doing. Sounds like they’re stuck,” Elliot said.
“Carlos, you see anything?” Rob said into the radio.
“Nothing. Trees are blocking everything.”
Rob looked around to see Peter, Krystal, and Mayra emerging from their cabins with weapons.
Carlos saw his wife carrying a rifle and joining the others. The radio came alive again with his voice.
“What is she doing out there?”
“She insisted,” Rob said.
His voice then came over the radio, high-pitched and anxious.
“Are you crazy? Get her inside with the others.”
“We need her. Besides, she’s a good shot. Better than you.”
“Very funny,”
Carlos said.
“You better hope nothing happens to her.”
“Got it. Just keep an eye out for anyone coming.” Rob lowered the radio and looked at Brad. “You ready, Scout?”
“Check,” Brad said.
“If anything doesn’t look right, get back here right away. We’ll cover you.”
Brad appeared pumped up and ready to go. He slapped a magazine in his pistol and stuffed a radio into his pocket.
“Good luck,” Peter said. Elliot, Krystal, and Mayra gave him a hug. He waved to everyone and ran off into the woods, bent over and staying low, heading toward the alarming sound of the nearby intruder.
“Let’s take our positions now,” Rob said. “And stay alert at all times. We can do this.”
The group seemed in agreement but lost in their own thoughts. This was real. It was happening. But they had come too far to let a roving mob of killers take over their camp and drive them out. They were taking a stand for their families and their very lives. Rob bowed his head and led them in prayer.
Brad hiked his way through the forest, following the engine, and came to the spot where it was in range—about a half mile from the camp and just parked there. Only the driver was visible. There was no one else around. He circled the truck, ran to the back, and carefully lifted a corner of the back canopy. It was empty. He cautiously moved forward to the driver’s side and pulled the door open, surprising the bearded driver.
The man jumped and let his foot off the gas. “Whoa there!”
“What are you doing? Where are the others?” Brad demanded and aimed his pistol at the driver’s head.
“It’s just me. I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“Why are you out here?” Brad shouted.
“I got lost, OK? Now I’m stuck!”
Brad held his pistol steady with one hand and pulled out his radio with the other. “Rob. We got a situation here.”
“Go ahead,”
Rob said over the radio.
“This guy is out here all by himself. Says he got lost. Could be a ruse, over.”
“Shut that truck off and bring him here.”
“Copy. Be back there in a minute.” He lowered the radio and put both hands on his pistol. “Out of the truck, now.”
The driver looked around, confused. “I don’t understand. What do you want from me?”
Brad lunged forward, jabbing the barrel into the man’s side. “Get out!”
The man held his hands up, seemingly frightened. “All right! I don’t want any trouble.”
“Turn the truck off,” Brad said.
The man did as told and then climbed out of the truck. Brad held the gun to his back as the man kept his arms up. “Start walking.”
“Can you please tell me what this is about?”
“Cut the shit. I know who you’re with. Where is everyone?”
“I have no idea what you’re talking about.”
Despite his denial, Brad knew something was up. He called Rob on the radio. “We’re headed back. Keep your eyes open. This truck could have been one giant diversion.”
“They’re here,”
Rob said. Gunshots popped over the speaker. Then the sound cut out.
“Rob!” Brad said. There was no answer. He jabbed the pistol into the man’s back. “Let’s go. Move faster!” He kept an eye out for the traps they had set. With that, they picked up the pace and hurried toward the cabin. He heard multiple shots coming from the camp.
***
Rob sunk into his position. Kneeling in his hole, he could see just over the plywood barricade in front of him. Everyone was at their spots circling the camp, and no one was going to get through undetected. Rob listened as Brad told him that the trucker was alone. But then Brad said the word, and it all made sense.
A diversion.
Just as Rob called out to the others, he heard several gunshot blasts coming from the opposite side of the camp. The trip wire traps had been triggered—several of them.
“East side! East side!” Rob shouted. He stood up and ran across the camp, waving to Carlos and signaling to the other direction. Carlos turned and looked through his scope just as Rob took cover next to where Peter was set up—in a shallow hole behind a barricade.
“The trip wire is going off left and right!” Peter said frantically. “How many of them are there?”
Rob rested his rifle on the ground and pulled out his radio and binoculars. He held the binos to his eyes and looked beyond the barricade, into the dense forest ahead. There was movement, more people than he could count. More trip wire blasts went off. He heard shouting and the clamor of an angry mob. A group of people stormed the hill, mainly men and a few women, drawing in closer and strangely unarmed. Behind them ran gangs of camouflaged men holding rifles and pistols.
It looked as if the entire town had been enlisted, acting as a front wave for Arthur’s criminal army. After triggering the sentry wire traps, many of the townspeople hit the ground in fear. Some ran off, but the massive advance continued largely unabated. That was, until they came upon the multitude of traps placed in their path.
For the unlucky ones, their legs went right into the holes, followed by excruciating screams. The spikes had been set four feet into the ground and ripped into their feet and legs, stopping them instantly. Rob watched ten people fall to the ground, screaming in agony with one leg stuck in the hole, as they tried in vain to free themselves. Frightened, the townspeople began to disperse, some retreating. The armed men in camouflage, didn’t seem to like this and followed the deserters, shooting their rifles.
Rob hit the ground with Peter. He called Carlos on the radio, demanding to know what he was seeing.
“They’re shooting rifles in the air. Trying to keep their people from retreating. It’s crazy.”
Rob glanced behind him and saw Brad running up with the truck driver at gunpoint. The man’s hands were tied behind his back with rope.
“Get down,” Brad said, pushing the man onto the ground near Peter and Rob. He then dropped to his knees, dazed and out of the breath. “Holy shit … what in the hell is going on?”
The radio came back on.
“A lot of them are running off. The ones who don’t have weapons, anyway. I think we won this thing,”
Carlos said.
“I don’t know what kind of demented plan this is, but if any of the armed men get close, be prepared to take them out,” Rob said. He lowered his radio and looked at Brad as gun shots and sentry blasts echoed around them. The forest was ripe with screams coming from all directions from those immobilized by the booby traps.
“What are they trying to do?” Brad asked. “This is madness.” He then turned to the trucker and held a pistol to his head. “What’s the plan? Tell me?”
The trucker winced in fear. “They made me do it. I’m not one of them. They took over the town and made me drive the truck!”
“All right. Calm down. Just tell me what you know,” Brad said.
“Please don’t shoot me!”
Brad smacked him across the face with his hand, hoping to knock some sense into him. He stared back, starting to cry, as he spoke. “He told us that you stole our stuff. All our pills!”
Rob moved closer, listening, as gunfire continued.
“They’re advancing,”
Carlos said over the radio.
“’Bout fifty yards out.”
Rob leaned closer to the trucker. “Who told you?”
“The mayor. Who do you think?”
Rob grabbed the trucker by his collar. “Well, it’s time to see where your mayor’s loyalties lie.”
Brad intervened, urging restraint. “Easy, Rob. He’s one of the townspeople. Just like us.”
The trucker shifted nervously as Rob gripped his flannel shirt with both hands. “We’ll see about that.”
There was no sign of Arthur anywhere. Rob shook the trucker. “Where is the mayor? Did he come, or did he just send all you to do his dirty work?”
Suddenly the gunfire faded as Carlos called through the radio. “
They stopped advancing. Got some guys taking positions behind trees. Don’t know what they’re doing.”
Everything went quiet, except for the distant cries of booby trap victims. Rob looked beyond the barrier with his binos and saw several injured people pulling themselves away along the ground, dragging a bloody foot or leg. The traps had really done a number, and it seemed that the worst was over. So far.
“Why aren’t the townspeople armed?” Rob asked the trucker.
The man shook his head. “I-I don’t know. I mean, we’re not allowed to have weapons, for starters.”
“If you’re not allowed to have weapons, then what the hell are you doing up here? I’ve got people ready to shoot anyone who gets within ten feet of our camp!”
The trucker was baffled and growing more nervous by the second. “They just want their drugs. You give them back their drugs, and everything will be fine.”
“What drugs?” Brad asked.
“Guys,” Peter said, anxious. “Something’s going on out there. Looks like they’re regrouping.”
The trucker looked at Brad as if the answer he had just given was common knowledge and made sense. “The drugs you stole from us.”
“Carlos. Status,” Rob said into the radio.
“Rob Parker and his gang of merry men!” a voice hollered from the forest.
Rob and Brad froze. They would recognize that voice anywhere as the mayor’s. Rob looked out, but couldn’t see anyone, even with his binos. Arthur’s men had all taken their own defensive positions.
“Speak to me, Rob. Where are you at?” Arthur bellowed.
“You get a clear shot, you take him out,” Rob said to Carlos over the radio. He wasn’t going to take any chances. The mayor was a menace and meant business. He’d even used his own unarmed people as bait. Rob hadn’t a clue of what else he had done, but from the looks of their former town, he was nothing but a sadistic killer. The kind of person decent people had to be wary of, not just in a time of crisis, but all the time.
“I bet you’d like nothing more than to take me out right now. Wouldn’t you, Rob?” Arthur asked.
Rob scanned the area and tracked the voice as coming from behind a large oak tree about forty yards away from the camp. Rob had no intention of answering him or playing his game. He’d keep him guessing.
He held the radio close to his mouth and spoke quietly. “I think I’ve got him locked behind the oak tree at my forty meters north. See if and when you can get a shot.”
“Got it,”
Carlos said.