Skin on My Skin (23 page)

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Authors: John Burks

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“We have to go,” I whispered, pulling away from the scene of carnage outside. “We have to run while we have the chance.”

“My babies,” Jenna said softly. “They came for me. They came to kill me. They want me dead for…”

“Stop it,” I ordered. We weren’t going to get out of this alive with Jenna acting crazy. Crazier, I guess. I pulled her by the hand and led her through the ruins of my father’s homemade containment unit and out the back door. Outside I could hear the soldier’s screams more clearly and, even distorted as they were by the suit speakers, it chilled me. The monsters were leaving none alive.
 

We hadn’t made it a block away when I saw, out of the corner of my eye, the figures leaping through the buildings around us. The creatures jumped from telephone pole to telephone pole like a squirrel might between tree branches. Their strength was uncanny. The one called Brian sprang from a nearby rooftop, shattering it in a cloud of shingle and wood as he leapt, landing right in front of us.
 

I came to a sliding stop and brought the rifle up to my shoulder, aiming for the thing’s head.
 

“No,” Jenna whispered, physically pushing the rifle barrel down. “He’s my son.”

“Mommy,” the creature said sadly. Its voice was primal and untrained. I could tell the word felt uncomfortable on the things tongue.
 

Another beast came down beside it and leapt at Jenna as if to rend her limb from limb. Brian caught it by the ankle and spun it out into the ruins. It landed like a bomb in the house next to us. My hands trembled on the rifle and despite Jenna stopping me I still wanted to shoot the thing in the face.
 

“My sweet Brian,” Jenna said, stepping up to the beast child, rubbing his cheek. “Mommy is so, so sorry.”

The creature’s already twisted face was a mix of emotion and rage. I had no idea how the thing knew we’d been the ones to set the fire, but by the look spread across its face, I knew that it did.
 

“Mommy?” the thing said again, as if its entire vocabulary consisted of just that one, single word, charged with emotion and tone to mean different things.
 

“I didn’t want you to suffer at his hands,” she said. “Grandfather is not a kind man and…”

“Mommy!” the thing blared, angrily.
 

Its cohorts began to arrive, surrounding both their apparent leader and Jenna and I. The other’s anger was not nearly as complex and confused as Brian’s. I knew that the monster leader, a child really, was the only thing keeping them from ripping us apart just as they had the soldiers.
 

“My baby. This world… it’s…”

There wasn’t really anything she could say. I should have realized it at the time we set the fire, but she sounded just like my father when he tried to kill me.
 

I lowered the rifle to the ground, letting it slip away. I took Jenna’s hand. “We have to go.”

“Mommy,” the thing growled, looking at me. It pointed to the south, away from the city.
 

The implication was clear. It wanted us to leave and I had no idea how Brian, the apparent leader of the group of feral plague monsters could keep his cohorts in check. I kept a death lock on Jenna’s hand and lead her down the alleyway formed by the mutated children. I did my dead level best not to make eye contact. There was so much hatred there, a murderous rage boiling just beneath the surface. These beasts wanted nothing more than to destroy us and, quite honestly, I didn’t blame them.
 

As we left I finally realized the monster children, with Brian as their leader, were my family. In a way, and in literal sense in a lot of cases I was sure, those children were my brothers and sisters.
 

My father had made us all monsters.
 

We walked without looking back and we didn’t stop for anything. Jenna didn’t say anything the entire way and, at that point, I was okay with that. I’d have liked nothing better than to be back in the Penthouse, away from my father and my twisted siblings, but I knew that was never going to happen. When we finally made our way across the old bridge into New Jersey, I knew then I’d never go back to the home I’d made for myself in the dying old city. I stopped and turned, taking it in, in all its decaying glory one last time as the sun began to set.
 

Jenna didn’t look back. I didn’t blame her. Not that it was a competition, but as survivor stories went hers was much worse.
 

We found the other surviving Touchers just where they said they’d be. The park across from the old sporting goods store might have been nice, fifteen years ago, but now the playground equipment was overgrown with weeds. The old sports store across the street had been looted long ago, but the remaining dozen men and women had managed a reasonable amount of gear. It was a start, anyway. I had better gear back at the old penthouse but there was no way we were going back into the city of monsters to get it. I was going to have to show them how to scavenge for real in the future, I guess.
 

And then I laughed. The future… it wasn’t something I’d ever thought about before. The idea of there actually being one appealed to me on some basic level.

“What took you so long?” Frank asked, coming and sweeping up Jenna in his arms.
 

I paused, wondering what Jenna might say to the man. Would she tell him about the beasts we’d left in the city? Would she tell him about her son and his new tribe? I waited for her to respond, but she didn’t. Instead, she looked at me, winked, and then stroked my cheek like we were old lovers.
 

“We got caught up in the moment,” Jenna said softly. Her lie was so complete I almost believed her. I wanted to believe her. “We had to celebrate.”

“Fine time for that,” Frank grunted. “We need to get moving. Henry has found an old bus he thinks might be serviceable and enough fuel to go for a little bit. Where are we going, anyway?”

“Florida,” Jenna replied without any hesitation. “I always wanted to go there.”

Frank nodded and joined the other Touchers who were gathering. Jenna went to join them and I stopped her, grabbing her hand.
 

“What?” she asked, annoyed with me.
 

“You aren’t going to tell them?”

“About?”

“The kids back there. Your kids.”

“I don’t think there’s any reason to tell them that, is there? Why ruin the trip?” Jenna asked and, for a moment, I wondered if she’d gone on and lost her grip on sanity. She had a faraway look in her eyes. We’d seen so much in the last couple of hours, and even before that. I knew that if she was slipping, I’d only helped contribute to the situation. I hadn’t helped her when she needed it the most.
 

“I won’t say anything right now,” I told her. “But you have to answer one thing for me.”

“What?”

“Can they breed?” I asked, images of a dead city filled with even deadlier monsters hard to get out of my head.
 

“I don’t know… why?” Jenna asked, though she didn’t really want to know the answer to that. I got the impression, from her tone, she didn’t actually want me asking. I didn’t want to know either and was stuck with the vision I’d have of New York inhabited with Brian’s offspring.
 

But we weren’t in New York anymore and we were going to head south, to Florida. What was left in that dead city was more than welcome to die along with it. We were, for the moment, safe. And if my father was to believed, the human race wasn’t doomed and the secret to unlocking our salvation was tucked safely away in my own blood. I didn’t know whether to believe the man or not. He had, after all, murdered a planet.
 

There would be time for all of that later, I thought, falling in behind the Touchers as they headed south, away from New York.
 

A new day was dawning and, for the first time, I had a little hope about it.
 

About the Author

John is a transplanted Texan and currently mayor of Hooker Island, Oklahoma. He is a fourth generation oilfield worker, occasional drunk, and epic doer of mostly useless stuff. He is aspiring to be an aspiring writer while doing a bit of Redneck Gardening on the side. He is married to the most fabulous woman on the planet and has five mostly evil children.
 

He writes what he likes to read, which is a bit of everything.

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