Hooded Man (3 page)

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Authors: Paul Kane

Tags: #Science Fiction

BOOK: Hooded Man
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“Help me, Dad... it hurts... make it stop!”

Max licked at Stevie’s face, trying to bring him round. The boy didn’t move.

Robert slumped over their still bodies, clutching their clothes, screaming at the universe, at God, at anything and everything, before finally exhaustion took him. Conversely now he didn’t want to wake, to face what had just happened. But when he did at last, realising that this was all real, wrapping them in the blankets they’d died beneath, he held on to the one and only shred of hope left.

“Stop wriggling about, Stevie, you’re taking all the covers. And let your Dad read his sports section.”

“Kay.”

Robert waited again, it must have been days... maybe even a couple of weeks, but he didn’t feel the passage of the hours. This time it was his own death Robert anticipated. He willed the cough to come, the blood, for the virus to take him. He was ready for it. Oh, was he ready.

Robert existed on what was left in the house – tinned food, mainly, that Joanne had squirreled away; she was a terror for keeping the cupboards overstocked. Though he hardly felt like eating or drinking, his survival instinct was too strong to simply let himself starve to death. He fed Max, but left the door open so the animal could supplement his diet elsewhere if he chose. Or perhaps for another reason altogether.

“You’re going to have to find a new owner soon, boy,” he’d tell the old dog daily. “I’m not going to be here for much longer.”

Then even that was snatched away from him by the men in gas masks, the hooded yellow-clad figures in their wagons, sent to scoop up the dead that littered the streets in a vain attempt to halt the spread of this infection. Even this far outside the towns and cities, the pavements were covered. The men broke down the doors of houses, checking inside, coming for the victims of the virus, spraying crosses on walls of buildings to be gutted with flamethrowers. Robert heard them approaching down the street, the megaphones blaring, but it hardly registered. Not until they were actually inside his house, waving their guns around, did he acknowledge their presence.

Max leapt at one of them, clawing at his plastic suit. The man struck the dog on the side of the head with the butt of his automatic rifle. Max fell to the floor with a whine and lay there twitching. Robert jumped out of his chair, but when a rifle was swung in his direction, he froze. He watched anxiously as a couple more men ascended the staircase. Was this what had become of the authorities in his absence, Robert wondered? Bully boys throwing their weight around?

“Two of ’em up here,” came the muffled call from upstairs. “Been there a while as well, by the looks of things.”

“Leave them where they are,” Robert warned the man pointing the gun at him. “I’ll be joining them soon enough.”

The fellow gave a cold laugh. “You not seen the news lately, or what passes for it these days? If you haven’t got it by now, chances are you never will. You must be O-Neg.”

“O-Neg?” Robert gaped at him.

“Completely immune, you lucky bastard. Though it’s a wonder you haven’t caught somethin’ else off them stiffs.”

He couldn’t take it in. He wasn’t going to die after all – leastways, not from the virus. But Robert felt far from lucky: he’d lost everything he ever cared about and now he just wanted this all to end.

The men came back downstairs and told him he’d have to go with them. They were looking for people like Robert, apparently. Someone in ‘power’ thought they might actually be able to develop an antidote from them.

“And what... what’s going to happen to Joanne and Stevie... My house?” Robert asked.

“Same as all the others with infected dead inside.
Poof
,” said one of them, opening his fist like a flower in bloom. “The rest of us can’t run the risk of catching it when we’ve gone to all this trouble.”

Tears welled in Robert’s eyes as a man to his left grabbed his arm, attempting to drag him outside. “I’m not going anywhere,” he told them.

“Oh, yeah?” the first man brought up his rifle, aiming at Robert’s head. He took a step towards the barrel, pressing the cold metal against his forehead.

“Do it, get it over with.”

They all looked at each other. “He’s too valuable,” said the second man, shaking his head.

“Don’t you understand? I don’t want to live anymore!”

“Tough shit,” said the third man, and they began to drag him out through the door. Robert elbowed one, lashed out at another, but all this earned him was a punch in the stomach.

Outside, two of them held Robert while the third sprayed a red ‘X’ on the front of his house and signalled to a truck behind. Robert looked on through the tears as more men climbed out with flamethrowers, tanks strapped to their backs. While he struggled, the ‘firemen’ disappeared inside, only to emerge moments later, leaving a trail of flames in their wake. And then, as if the rest of it hadn’t been enough, something crawled from the spreading conflagration, looking for all the world like a demon emerging from Hell. Fur alight and whimpering with pain, Max made it a few steps down the path before collapsing into a burning heap. They hadn’t even bothered to check he was dead before setting the house on fire. Or maybe they just didn’t give a crap.

It was too much to bear. Robert reached up and pulled one of the men’s gas masks off, then swung it at his other captor.

“Oh-shit-oh-shit-oh-shit –”
gibbered the first man, fumbling to replace his mask, while Robert wrestled out of the other one’s grip. Then he ran.

“Get him!”

The third man shot into the air, careful not to hit their prisoner, powerless to stop him.

Robert made it round the corner, glancing back over his shoulder only once. His house and everything in it was a blazing inferno, like many of the others nearby.

“Goodbye, sweetheart,” he whispered to his wife. “Goodbye, son. I love you both very much.”

The men would come after him, he knew that, but they wouldn’t kill him. Instead they’d take him away somewhere to be prodded and poked, to provide a cure for the men in the masks and their superiors. People he’d once served (
no, not like that... never like that!
). So Robert ran, harder and faster than he ever had in his life. He didn’t have a clue where he was going, just that he had to hide – he needed to get away from people: the living and the dead. If only those with O-Neg blood were immune, as the man back at his house had said, then most of the population had already been wiped out. Joanne would probably have been able to give him a more precise estimation... if she’d been alive.

On his journey he came across a small abandoned army surplus store, which had been partially looted, the window smashed and whatever was in the display long since stolen. That wasn’t what interested him. Robert climbed through, hoping that there might be at least some of the things he’d need: a change of clothing, for starters. He found a pair of tough khaki combat trousers, a green t-shirt and a hooded top that fitted him, and a long, waxy outdoor coat. All that remained was to find a decent knife, a compass and some twine. Once he’d scrounged them up, he left whatever money he had on him by the till.

In the end it was a logical choice. Head for the woodlands at Rufford, where he’d spent so much time with Max, where he’d taken Joanne and Stevie occasionally at weekends and bank holidays. Robert would let the oak, silver birch and ferns hide him from what was left of society, live out his life until death took him from natural causes; hopefully soon. Maybe he’d just slip and break his neck one day...

Until then, he would get by. Robert would draw on the survival training he’d gone through as part of his job. He’d thought it was daft at the time, all those role-playing exercises, the team building out in the middle of nowhere. But he’d picked up quite a few things on those courses without even realising it. Unlike some of the lads, he’d actually been paying attention when the tutor had explained about things like making shelters and hunting if you were stranded. The first thing he’d done when he got to the woods was construct a simple lean-to between a couple of trees. He’d whittled down branches to make the poles, tying these together with the twine, then he’d covered the framework over with all the foliage he could find in the surrounding area. A new home, designed for one.

For water, to drink and to wash, he visited the huge lake at Rufford or trapped rain – filtering it through material torn from his disused clothing, then boiling it over a fire. The fire Robert made with a bow and drill, spinning the sharpened piece of wood on a fire board until it caught light. Using kindling, he’d build it up and warm himself.

For food, he picked edible mushrooms to begin with, then set simple snares and drag nooses to catch small animals, placed over trails or runs, attached to poles. These were large enough to comfortably pass over the creatures’ heads, but then grew tighter as they struggled to get out. In his former life he might have felt some guilt about doing this, but it was a different world now. He was a different person. And he’d eaten meat all his life, hadn’t he? Just never thought about where it came from. Now that was his responsibility, because Robert couldn’t allow himself to become weak, not when the men might still come after him. He would catch ducks and geese by the water, using a bolas – two stones connected by the twine and thrown, after some degree of practice, around the bird’s necks to weigh them down. And he’d hunt small game with a sharpened spear, not throwing it as you might see in the movies, because that was a good way to lose the weapon, but jabbing at his prey. Then he’d cook whatever he could find over a spit beside the lean-to.

But the bow he used to light the fire gave him other ideas as well. Robert selected a hardwood branch – dead and dry – about two metres or so long that was relatively free from knots and limbs. With his knife, he scraped down the largest end so that it had the same pull as the smaller one. The wood had a natural curve to it and he was careful to scrape from the side facing him, so it wouldn’t snap the first time he used it. Robert spent ages attaching the twine and getting the pull of the bow just right. Moving on to the arrows, he used the straightest dry sticks he could find, scraping and straightening the shafts. For the arrowheads, he used sharpened stone – then attached feathers from his previous hunts to the shaft, notching the ends. In many respects all this was the easy part, because Robert only had limited experience with a bow and arrow, amounting to the handful of times he’d taken Stevie for archery lessons on holidays.

So he’d practised; for many hours. Drawing back the bow, letting the arrows fly into a target carved on a tree. To begin with Robert had been miles away from the trunk, let alone the target, but gradually his aim improved.

Just like darts... only with bigger arrows
, he’d tell himself.

He recalled the day that he hit the bull’s eye – he’d been determined to do it before the dark skies emptied their load. The sense of satisfaction was tremendous, and for a split second he’d almost forgotten where he was and how he came to be there, turning and expecting Joanne and Stevie to be behind him, clapping.

“Way to go, Dad, way to go.”

“Quite the outdoorsman, now, aren’t we?”
Joanne’s beautiful eyes were filled with love, not terror. Her smiling mouth not stained with blood anymore.

But all was quiet except for the usual sound of birdsong.

As the first spots of rain came down, Robert had hung his head, pulling the hood up. Then he’d returned to camp for the night, walking past the cloth catchments collecting the water.

Once again, the days blurred into each other – and Robert could only go by the fact that the grass on the once neatly-trimmed golf course and the parks was now knee-length, that the beard he’d begun growing was thick and bushy, that he’d had to begin stockpiling meat in the ice houses at Rufford, man-made stone buildings set into mounds of earth that would keep it chilled, and insulated by the soil. He’d busted off the barred doors and used them as his own personal larder.

The meat mainly came from sheep in the fields, in particular the shaggy Hebrideans that had been introduced to the scrubland before the Cull: easy, slow-moving targets. But he’d noticed that deer were running free now too in the woods, and this was a chance to really put his new-found skills with the bow to good use. The first time he’d attempted a kill, he’d completely messed it up, stumbling through the undergrowth like the most uncoordinated of bulls blundering into Ming vases, alerting the startled deer to his presence. Since that day, he’d learnt to be very stealthy, and adept at blending into his surroundings. He’d bagged more deer and sheep than he could remember, ensuring enough to eat through the past two winters at least; and enough skins and wool to keep him warm during the colder months.

But today he was hunting something altogether different. Something that was worth all the waiting, the crouching, the memories that had come flooding back. Because there, in the clearing, was the magnificent sight of a stag: its strong grey and white torso moving fluidly as it paused to sniff at the air.

Robert held his breath. It was the ultimate test of his hunting skills; one false move and he’d tip off his quarry. Through the long grass and ferns, he looked at the animal, and he was so sure it was looking back at him. All hunted creatures were aware of being watched – if only on a subconscious level – he’d observed. It was the same thing he’d seen when he was just about to give chase to a pickpocket or bootlegger. They’d make a break for it just a fraction of a second before spotting Robert. The trick was to be quicker than them.

If he was going to make his move, it had to be right now. Robert rose, breaking cover, the leaves, twigs, and branches he’d used to camouflage himself falling from his body. Though he’d been hunkered down low, unmoving all this time, his legs were far from stiff and his muscles held him steady. Simultaneously, he raised his bow, which could easily have been mistaken for another branch, another piece of camouflage, were it not for the taut twine attached to its length. Robert and the stag exchanged a glance, the merest of heartbeats and yet lasting forever.

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