Read The Hunger (Book 3): Ravaged Online

Authors: Jason Brant

Tags: #vampires, #End of the World, #Dracula, #post apocalyptic, #Zombies, #apocalypse

The Hunger (Book 3): Ravaged (14 page)

BOOK: The Hunger (Book 3): Ravaged
13.82Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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“A garden can’t grow if it’s infested with weeds.” Colt got out and rolled his neck. It popped and cracked.

Lance eased out of his seat, hissing as his legs brushed the fabric. How long would it take his burns to heal? The constant pain weighed on him more than the looming night.

He looked across the street at an abandoned restaurant that used to be a Primanti Bros. They made some of the best sandwiches Lance had ever had. They mixed odd ingredients that shouldn’t have worked, but tasted delicious.

“I could use a burger topped with fries and coleslaw about now,” he mumbled as he walked past Colt.

“What? Coleslaw on a burger?”

“They were known for doing weird shit like that. Sounds nasty, but it worked. People in the ‘Burgh went nuts over it.”

“I’ve never understood Yanks.”

As Lance approached the front, he heard the mewling sound that Adam had described. It was nearly identical to what they’d heard in Latrobe.

“Hear that?” Lance asked.

“Of course.”

“Have you heard that anywhere else?”

Colt paused, listening. “No. This is something new.”

They worked their way around to the back of the restaurant, following the sound. It got louder as they walked, filling the area behind the building.

The hole Adam had talked about was thirty yards beyond it, dug into a patch of earth between two parking lots. It yawned nearly fifteen feet wide, its girth far beyond what Lance had seen in Latrobe.

The odd, difficult-to-describe sound came from within.

Colt bent to a knee before it and stared into the darkness below. “I wonder how much of this city has tunnels running underneath it?”

“If it’s anything like Latrobe, then I’d guess a whole lot.”

Colt bent lower, turning his head sideways so he could listen better. He stayed that way for nearly a minute before straightening out. “Goddamn. They’re communicating.”

“What?”

“That sound we’re hearing is a rudimentary form of communication.”

Lance frowned. “You mean they’re talking?”

“Sort of, yes.”

“How can you tell?”

“Those noises are coming from several different creatures. One makes a sound, then another responds. On and on it goes.” Colt stood and gestured to the edge. “Take a listen.”

Lance knelt down. He couldn’t tell if it was the same Vladdie making all the sounds, or a group of them. The tones of the sound shifted, so it was possible that Colt was onto something.

He stayed at the edge, resting on his knee, letting the implications settle in. “If you’re right about this, then we’re screwed. That would explain how they’re able to come up with plans.”

Dread settled in the pit of his stomach. His shirt, soaked through with sweat, clung to his back and shoulders. The sun inched its way closer to the horizon. Soon, the infected would pour from these openings in a torrent of gnashing teeth.

He felt helpless as he listened to them.

When the Xavier virus had taken hold of the country, Lance thought that he’d witnessed the extinction of mankind. He’d watched people being carried away into the night from the window of his apartment, listening to their cries of agony and fear. The power had gone out. The government had collapsed.

But he’d survived.

Found friends.

A girlfriend.

He had a child on the way.

Now, he realized, the small flame that was the last remnant of the human race was about to be extinguished. Everything he’d fought for, all that he’d built, would be destroyed under the onslaught of the beasts waiting under his feet.

It would only be a matter of time before the camp’s defenses would fall. He had to get them away from there.

“Cass.” Lance stood, his eyes narrowing, jaw set. No matter what he had to do, he would get Cass some place safe. “We have to get back and warn everyone.” He turned around. “We have to abandon the com—”

His ears rang as something in Colt’s hand barked.

Searing pain exploded in his leg, just above the knee.

Lance collapsed at the edge of the hole.

His hands explored the agony in his thigh as blood poured through his fingers. He looked to Colt for help, confused, unable to think. What had hit him?

The major stood before him, a pistol held in his hand. He aimed at Lance’s chest. “I’m sorry about this, Lance, I really am. I meant it when I said you were a man of action. You’ve done well for your people, but you’re going to get them all killed. If I don’t take care of you now, then you’ll do everything you can to thwart what needs to be done.”

“You fucking
shot
me!” Lance gaped at the pistol, comprehension finally settling in. The throbbing in his leg made it hard to think. “What are you doing?”

“I’m killing you.”

“Why?”

“I just told you why.”

The gauze around his legs soaked through. The dirt under him turned to mud as his life poured from his wound. He felt woozy.

Mouth dry.

“Don’t do this.” Lance licked his lips, but his tongue was too dry to wet them. “There aren’t enough of us left to keep killing each other.”

“By taking you out, along with a few others, I’ll save many more. This is what I do now, Lance. I make the hard decisions that you could never make. There is a cost to save your people. This is the down payment.”

Lance looked into Colt’s eyes and saw the determination there. Pleading was pointless. Colt had brought him here for this exact reason.

“Goodbye, Lance.”

“Wait.” Lance released his leg and put his hands in his lap. The blood flow increased. He grew lightheaded as he stared at him. “Don’t let anything happen to Cass. Please, don’t hurt her.”

“You have my word. I’ll keep her safe.”

Lance closed his eyes and bowed his head. He fought against the sting of tears, refusing to give Colt the pleasure.

The gun cracked.

Pain ripped through Lance’s chest. He fell backward, tumbling into the hole.

His legs hit the angled bottom of the tunnel first, sending a fresh wave of misery into his bullet wounds. He collapsed on his stomach in the dirt, facing the shadows extending under the parking lot.

He tried to push himself up, but his arms lacked the strength.

His eyelids grew heavy.

Breathing was difficult.

A shriek came from somewhere further down the tunnel.

Slowly, painfully, he craned his neck to look at the darkness stretching under the city. He could hear the infected down there, could smell their sour stench.

Lance’s eyes rolled around as he attempted to peer up at Colt. He could see the massive man’s shadow extending a few feet down the wall of the hole, but not the man himself.

Lance tried to tell him to fuck off, but the words wouldn’t form.

He struggled to take one last breath as he faded.

And then he was gone.

Chapter 18

––––––––

C
ass paced back and forth in front of the cabin.

“Where the hell is he?” she asked Brown. “The sun is going to set in less than half an hour.”

“He’ll make it,” Brown assured her, though his eyes betrayed his concern. “Besides, he has the major with him. He’s in good hands.”

“They both should know better than to stay out this long.” She opened and closed her hands repeatedly as she paced. “I’m going to kick his dumb ass.”

She tried to force her thoughts to other things, but she couldn’t help it.

As much as she’d tried not to have feelings for Lance, she’d fallen completely in love with the goofy bastard. Finding out that she was pregnant would have horrified her six months ago. Now, she couldn’t wait to hold their child.

That fact alone still mystified her. They were in dire straits, their very survival called into question every single night. Being pregnant would slow her down, make her vulnerable. Cass refused to be a hindrance. She would always pull her weight. Being pregnant didn’t jive with this new, harsh, unfiltered world.

And yet, here she was, expecting and happy. Lance had broken down a section of her defenses, and she loved him for it.

During their nights together, sweaty and exhausted, caught in the euphoria of their dirty deeds, Lance had often spoken to her about his depression. He’d opened up about how she’d dragged him out of a dark place, given him something to care for. As humanity fell apart, Lance York had pulled himself together.

And he credited her with his newfound love of life.

What she had never shared with him was that he had done the same for her.

After the death of her father, she’d fallen into a cycle of self-loathing and sabotage. A seemingly never-ending parade of men came through her bedroom, stopping just long enough to make the pain go away for a few hours. She held everyone at arm’s length, knowing that she couldn’t be hurt if she didn’t allow anyone too close.

Lance had chipped away at her hardened exterior day by day.

Just as he claimed she had saved him, she knew that he’d done the same for her. As she stood by the driveway, pacing and nervous, she decided that she would tell him just how much she cared for him that night. Expressing herself in that way had always been difficult, but she knew that he deserved to be told what he meant to her.

After she finished kicking his ass for being so careless about the time.

“Goddamn it. Where the hell are they?”

“Calm down, Cass.” Eifort sat in a lawn chair, feeding rounds into extra magazines for her M4. “As much as we make fun of him, he’s a tough guy. He knows what he’s doing.”

“Does he?” Cass shook her head. “He set himself on fire last night.”

“And saved the camp,” Brown said. “Think about something else. Did you get to talk to any of the soldiers? Do they know what all Colt has planned?”

Cass put her hands on her hips and breathed deeply through her nose. She looked at the sky again and cringed when she saw that the sun had disappeared behind the trees. When Lance got there, she planned to kick him square in the nuts. “Two of them said he wanted to meet with the Wildman, but we already knew that. They weren’t very talkative.”

Most of those in the camp stood around the edges of the forest, guns slung over shoulders or leaning against legs. They watched the trees in nervous silence, waiting for the inevitable battle.

The helicopter sat in the middle of the field. It had returned two hours before and landed. The pilot, a smarmy man with a cocksure attitude, had told everyone that he’d been out running reconnaissance missions most of the day. He’d refueled his chopper and had the guns reloaded.

He leaned against the door, smoking a cigarette. If he was concerned about the coming Vladdies, he didn’t show it.

The other soldiers stood with the guards. They looked calmer than the civilians did, but not by a lot. Their unease didn’t quite sit well with Cass. If they were so hardened, so intent on wiping out nests, why were they so nervous?

Cass checked the driveway again, chewing her lower lip. “I’m going out to find them.”

“The hell you are.” Brown stood and pointed to the tree line. “The sun is down. It’ll be dark in a few minutes.”

“That’s exactly why I’m going out there. It’s going to be dark, and Lance hasn’t come back.” She headed for the bank of vehicles by the side of the cabin. “Don’t bother trying to—”

Movement at the end of the driveway caught her eye and she paused, squinting against the growing darkness. “Thank Christ.”

The Jeep’s engine whined as it accelerated along the gravel. They were coming in fast.

Cass crossed her arms over her chest and put on her best pissed-off expression. She didn’t want Lance to see how frightened she’d been for him. He needed to understand that he couldn’t pull this kind of garbage ever again.

As the vehicle pulled beside a group of trucks and parked, Cass saw that only one person was inside.

Her heart raced when Colt stepped out. A ball of lead formed in her stomach. “Where’s Lance?”

Colt strode toward her, his face sullen. “I’m sorry.”

“What do you mean ‘you’re sorry’? Where the fuck is Lance?”

“What’s going on?” Eifort stood from her chair and moved beside Brown.

“He didn’t make it.” Colt stopped in front of Cass, locking his eyes on hers.

“What?” Cass shook her head. “I don’t have time for this. It’s almost dark and—”

“We found a large tunnel in Greensburg.” Colt looked to Brown. “When we were standing in front of it, one of
them
jumped out of it and grabbed him. I tried to shoot it before they disappeared into the tunnel, but...”

He trailed off as he turned back to Cass. “I’m sorry.”

“If he’s put you up to this as some kind of sick joke, I’m going to kick both of your asses.” Cass stepped closer to him. “Now tell me where he is.”

Colt held her gaze. “I’m sorry.”

Cass looked back to the empty Jeep, fighting the sinking feeling settling in her midsection.

“He’s gone? You left him out there?” Brown asked. His deep voice was quiet, barely above a whisper. He took Eifort’s hand.

“There wasn’t anything I could do. The thing was so fast that neither of us even saw it coming.” Colt kept looking at Cass. “I would have done anything to save him, but they were gone before I had time to get a shot off.”

“I’m going to get him.” Cass started toward the trucks. Panic saturated her thoughts as she imagined Lance being dragged into the darkness by a Vladdie.

“Cass, no.” Eifort came after her. “It’s too late to go out.”

“Fuck that.” Cass broke into a run. She was ten feet from the backend of a dented Silverado when powerful arms wrapped around her. “Let me go! I have to save him!”

The arms lifted her from the ground and spun her around.

Brown and Eifort stood in front of the cabin. Tears ran down their cheeks as they looked up at her. Eifort’s lips quivered.

“I’m sorry,” Colt said again from behind her. He carried her toward her friends as she squirmed in his grip.

“Let go of me, you fuck! There’s still time!” She kicked backward, catching him in the thigh. “Put me down, goddamn it!”

His grip tightened.

Brown reached out and took her hand. “Cass—”

“Don’t touch me! Get this dickhead off me and help—”

BOOK: The Hunger (Book 3): Ravaged
13.82Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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