Authors: Austen Rodgers
Tags: #apocalyptic survival zombies, #logbook, #apocalypse, #ebookundead, #ebook, #Zombies, #zombie, #Apocalyptic
Talking about it, Branden and I decided that we were underequipped to tend to Joey’s injuries. We tried speaking to him, but the only response we got from him was grunts and groans. We decided our best course of action would be to go out and search around the local stores for medical supplies. Honestly, neither of us knew what frostbite called for, but we figured any first aid kit would have what we needed. Without wasting too much time, we gathered our weapons and left the Warehouse.
We walked to a nearby area where stores are all relatively close together, thinking our luck would be best there. Also worth noting is that the stores we visited are on Viking Road, therefore, we were decently far away from any housing. It’s just a small area with stores on both the north and south side of the road. If we were going to find a first aid kit somewhere, it would probably be in that area.
On our way, we noticed the bodies of the infected we had hit with my car on our initial arrival to the Warehouse. The bodies lay there on the warming concrete with flies buzzing about them. Just like the woman we had seen the other day in Branden’s condo driveway, the bodies were bloated. All over the bodies, most commonly on the stomach, the skin was stretched outward from center mass. Every single one was like this.
Upon reaching the shopping area and passing a gas station that we thought about poking in, we noticed that this area was desolate, too. There were no people anywhere to be seen, infected or not.
“
What is up with this? I’ve never seen this area so quiet,” I said.
“
Yeah. Same here,” Branden said.
“
Maybe the disease doesn’t have much of a foothold yet.”
“
People have probably left the area or are staying at home, so it’s not impossible.”
“
I’m thinking that it’s not as strong as it is
feared
.”
Branden nodded.
As we walked down the road, closer to the shopping district, something odd came into sight. In the middle of the road ahead, there appeared to be a barricade running across the street. We stopped for a moment and tried to determine why it was there and if the area could be dangerous. The barricade, made of shopping carts from the stores nearby, gave me the impression that it wasn’t set up by police or military. A good amount of time must have been spent working on it when you considered its size. Hours, at the least, seeing as how in some areas of the barricade, the carts were stacked three high.
I suggested that we walk across the grass and behind the stores. Staying out of that specific area would probably be good for our own health. Branden objected by telling me to get a spine. He felt that the area was obviously abandoned and the shopping carts posed no threat. He decided to just keep walking up the road, and not wanting to be alone, I followed behind him. As we walked up to the poorly barricaded area, we noticed movement in a restaurant diagonally to our left.
Branden and I sought cover under the carts and peeked out occasionally. For a long minute, neither of us could see anything inside, which is surprising since a majority of the shop was windows. We looked at one another, hoping that the other would have an answer or an idea as to what we saw. I felt that our eyes must have been playing tricks on us and stood up to get a better sight. A loud snap echoed in the shopping district.
Pain ripped into my left arm, and I ducked down back under the carts. I ripped at my shirt to see what the matter was and found that blood was running down my arm and onto the concrete. I cursed after realizing that the wound was the product of a bullet but thanked God that whoever was shooting had horrible aim. The bullet had gone completely through my arm, so I knew I would not have to worry about digging in my own arm, or having Branden do so, and pull the lead out.
I asked Branden to tie scraps from my own shirt around my arm as a makeshift compress, and he did. I badly wanted to get back at whoever had shot me. Guessing by the sound of the gunshot and the size of the bullet hole, I guessed the caliber of the gun was small. Boy, was he in for a surprise when I was going to pull the trigger on him. When Branden was done, both he and I peeked from our cover.
Cracked glass in one of the windows of the restaurant gave away the aggressor’s position. Whoever made the shot didn’t think that by shooting through the glass it would hurt his own accuracy and the cracks would cut down his visibility. I kept my eyes on the other windows because I knew that the shooter would be forced to move if he wanted to take another shot. As expected, I saw movement behind a different window.
“
Cover me,” Branden ordered.
Before my mind could comprehend his request, he bolted from behind the barricade and made his way behind a truck. It sat abandoned up on the grass that surrounded the parking lot to the restaurant. When it did click with my brain, I attempted to pull my gun up to rest on a cart, but found it extremely difficult with the damage to my left arm. Before I was able to successfully bring the muzzle of my rifle up, the shooter fired again. Branden, resting with his back against the black import, appeared fine. I had no new sensation of pain, so I assumed us both safe.
In the building, the shooter was moving from one window to another. Taking my aim more seriously than I had ever before, I placed the figure in the sights of my rifle. Resting my gun on the cart must have helped my aim immensely; the sights lined up perfectly and did not shake, despite the pain my arm caused me.
The gun bucked into my shoulder when I pulled the trigger. I had a feeling of intuition that I had got him, and I yelled out to Branden to tell him so. While cycling the bolt to load another round into the chamber, I kept my eyes on the building. To my surprise, I saw more movement. I was confused. I knew that I had hit the shooter, who should have been writhing on the floor, but then I realized the shooter was not alone. Two people moved about the building, then rushed out the door and began charging in our direction.
The first man, thin and lanky, had a metal baseball bat in his left hand. His forearms were like toothpicks, and his hair long and unkempt. His wingman, close behind him, was more average in build. What he held was even more frightening than the first man’s bat. The second man was charging us wielding a battle-axe with both hands. My eyes squinted and my jaw dropped when that man came outside. But after my moment of shock, I took aim at the second man.
My aim was still accurate, fortunately. The battle-axe wielding man dropped to the ground clutching his chest. His partner just kept on running toward Branden. The assailant’s metal bat nicked the hood of the truck, sending his attempted swing at Branden’s head further from its intended target.
By a kick to the man’s groin, Branden reduced him to hobbit size. On bent knees and gasping for air, the man suffered. Branden is quick and I will definitely give him credit for that. His retaliations are always swift and sharp. But it is a sad way to lose a fight, I imagine. One moment you have the advantage of a blood-pumping rush on your opponents, and then, with one swing of a foot, you are left lying on the ground. Normally I would say that it’s dirty fighting and I do not appreciate it, but I do like to win when my life is on the line.
We left Bilbo unconscious on the ground and headed up into the small restaurant. A thought came to my mind and I couldn’t help but share my own peculiar notions.
I turned to Branden and said, “Eat flesh?”
He smiled and lightly laughed once he realized the reference I was making to the restaurant. If you are wondering, I’m not calling it by name in this journal because by the time you read this, I will more than likely be dead and gone, and all of these places I write of will have been reduced to rubble. If you’re an archeologist searching for clues of a gap in history, I have one thing to say: I don’t want to make this too easy for you.
Continuing, we kept ourselves attentive as we walked in. We expected to be attacked again, but to our own surprise we ended up with a completely different situation. Behind the main counter where you would normally get your food was a very tall, lean man with nothing but brown stubble on his chin and head. He raised his arms above his head and asked us not to shoot.
“
Come out from the behind the counter,” I told the man, and with slow and careful steps he did. “What are you doing? Ambushing innocent people?”
A torn look came across his face, and he stuttered when he first tried to reply. He took a deep breath and said, “My name is Will. I, uh… Um… It’s kind of a long story. It would be easier to show you. Do you mind if I reach into my pocket?”
I shook my head. “My friend will do it for you.”
Branden lowered his gun and took a step behind Will. Will’s face turned slightly red with embarrassment as Branden poked around inside his pocket. From Will’s pants, Branden retrieved a sheet of folded paper. He carefully unfolded it, and held it up so that I, too, could see its contents. It was a handwritten poster in a style considerably similar to an old ‘wanted’ sign. Along the top of the paper in large, red letters it read: “Food & Ammo.” In smaller letters down below it stated: “Will trade for
live
zombies” with an address at the bottom.
“What’s that address?” I asked Branden.
“
I’m not sure. It might be the hospital.” He pondered for a moment, and continued, “That’s around the Hill, yeah. It’s gotta be the hospital.”
Will nodded somewhat ecstatically. “Yes! That is it! I know one of the doctors there. They just started putting units of people together to gather infected and bring them in for examination. Well, there’s more to it than that but…” His eyes studied our faces, and I could tell he was worried about how we might deal with him. He continued, “Needless to say, I was one of the first people who signed up.” Will laughed awkwardly.
Branden and I looked to one another.
“
We’ll have to look into that,” I said.
Then, from out of the kitchen, muffled grunting reached our ears. I immediately asked Will what it was. The only response Will had was stepping to the side and dropping his head. I walked past him with a heavy sigh, wondering what I was getting into.
Locating the sound didn’t take long. Behind metal shelving stocked with cans and other cooking necessities, a man was in the corner. He appeared to be bound by his wrists and gagged with a grimy towel. He lay there with outstretched legs and a hanging head, and I wondered if he was conscious. Medical wrappings soaked with blood covered his forearms and neck from recent wounds. I was unable to see the man’s face, so I made my way closer. The stranger sluggishly awoke, but then began to panic and push himself further into the corner at the sound of my footsteps.
I put my gun down and held my hands in front of me. “Hey. It’s okay. I’m not going to hur—”
I cussed under my breath and repeatedly took the Lord’s name in vain; I knew this man.
“
Taylor!” I said as my knees met the ground next to him.
I tried to calm him down by getting him to look at me, but this friend of mine had seen better days. One of his eyes was swollen and a blood trail that came down from his hairline had dried to his skin.
I
pulled the blood and kitchen grease-tainted rag from his mouth and spoke his name repeatedly in an effort to get a reaction from him. All I got out of him was a mumble as he fell back under. I cut his bindings and started pulling him out of there with my arm wrapped firmly around his chest.
“
What the fuck is this, Will?” I snapped. “What did you do to him?”
I was angry, yes, but I still don’t think that
I
was the one Will should have been afraid of. Branden’s mouth dropped for but a moment before his lips and brow tightened. Revenge was on the tips of our fingers; it wouldn’t be difficult to make quick work of Will for binding and torturing Taylor so near to death. But that’s not something I could indulge in guiltlessly.
Will shook his head and waved his arms in the air. “I can explain! Please, just give me a chance to explain.”