The Hungry 4: Rise of the Triad (The Sheriff Penny Miller Series) (12 page)

BOOK: The Hungry 4: Rise of the Triad (The Sheriff Penny Miller Series)
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“So they just… faked erasing an entire state?”
“I wouldn’t phrase it exactly that way, but… pretty much. Most of Nevada. They set off a number of devices in a controlled pattern. The rest weren’t even nukes. More like bunker bombs.”
Scratch was shaking his head. “This must be a government operation
.”
“The government works in mysterious ways, its wonders to perform. Their purpose was just to find a logical reason to keep people out of Nevada until they could find a way to control… the bigger problem.”
“You mean the damn
zombie plague?”
Miller turned to Scratch. “Well, that sure as hell explains why zombies are popping up everywhere like a prom night hard on. In fact, we saw some of them up in Colorado right out of the gate, so the plan failed anyway.”
“Well, yes and no,” Rat said. She adjusted her headphones, made a sour face and checked her watch as if expecting them to be making better time.
Miller cocked her head. “Explain. I’m all ears.”
“Well, they aren’t exactly everywhere, Penny.”
“Enlighten us.”
Rubenstein interrupted the conversation. “The actual zombies are really only in Nevada, Central Utah, most of the western parts of Colorado, northern New Mexico, the Grand Canyon, and a little bit of California—and even there mostly up by Lake Tahoe. And, you know, down by Los Angeles and Malibu. That’s pretty much it so far. Otherwise they are now completely contained.”
Miller snorted. “Contained? If you think that hot mess we just came from could be considered containment by any damn stretch, Rubenstein, you can kiss my freckled butt. There are already a couple hundred of them loose around your fun house back in Malibu. It won’t take long for the virus to spread. This has not been contained by a damn sight. In fact, there seem to be zombies just about everywhere I go these days.”
“Well,” said Rat, almost to herself, “that’s another reason we wanted to find you.”
“Why? Because the zombies are following
me
?” demanded Miller. That idea made her stomach clench.
Rubenstein cleared his throat. “That’s just the paranoia talking again, Penny. I want to run some tests after we land.”
“Fuck you and the mule you rode in on.”
“No, it is not because you’re being followed by the undead,” Rat said. “It’s because our good friend Karl Sheppard has convinced the powers that be that you, Sheriff Penny Miller, and only you, hold the key to finding a cure.”
Miller straightened up. “Now, wait one damned minute! I’m not going to be a guinea pig again, not even for Karl Sheppard.”
“Here we go,” said Scratch under his breath. He leaned forward. “Those ass hats want to experiment on Penny again? Then they’ll damned well have to get through me first.”
“Save all that macho posturing,” said Rat. “Penny, Sheppard needs your help.”
“Indeed he does,” said Rubenstein. “I know you all hate me, but let me say something important. It is something that could affect the future of the entire human race. We think we are close to finding a cure.”
Much to Miller’s surprise, no one mocked Rubenstein this time. Perhaps it was because of the power contained in the word “cure.” They all wanted the horror of the last few months put behind them for good.
“If it’s Sheppard doing the research,” Scratch said. He put his calloused hand on Miller’s knee, “Maybe we should hear them out.”
Dr. Rubenstein smiled benevolently. “You are still the key, Penny. You are our only real hope. If we can just run some more tests and find a way to understand the biochemistry of the virus, see what is really going on inside of you, we could destroy the virus that was accidentally created. But first we need to know
why.
Why you survived the virus when all those others succumbed.”
Miller clenched her teeth. “You can’t be serious.”
“Penny,” Rubenstein said, “I think we can learn how to end this plague once and for all. Your cooperation could save countless lives.”
Miller stared at him, stunned by his bland audacity. Scratch took her hand. The others watched the rest of the conversation without interjecting.
“No.”
Rubenstein made a steeple of his fingers. He looked idiotic in the headset, but his words rang true. “I don’t blame you for resenting me, but like it or not, you are a living, breathing science experiment. The worst thing in this world that could happen is that you stop giving us new data, because then your life, the lives of everyone you knew and loved, and all of those who have died so horribly because of this zombie plague, will have meant nothing in the end. Greatness has been thrust upon you. We need you to save the human race.”
Despite Scratch holding her hand, Miller felt alone. “You expect me to buy that contrite bullshit? Why the hell should I trust you?
Any
of you?”
“You trust me, right?” Scratch said.
Miller turned to look at him. With his short haircut, he seemed out of place, almost unrecognizable. A sickening thought occurred to her—what if this wasn’t Scratch, just a stranger doubling for him? What if she’d been set up again and he was just some brilliant actor deep in character? She looked at his tattoos, searching for any mistakes in copying. They all looked correct, but anything was possible these days, and she had been sedated in that hospital bed for a long time. Or perhaps Rubenstein was telling the truth, and she had a tumor. Was she completely paranoid? Miller felt dizzy. One part of her mind knew she was just being overtaken by anxiety again, but she couldn’t seem to help herself. She had never felt so isolated and confused, despite the familiar faces around her. Christ, they all seemed to want her to spend the rest of her life stuck up like a pincushion in some bare-assed hospital gown.
“Penny?”
Miller snapped out of it. Of course it was Scratch who’d penetrated the fog. And he had asked her a question. Miller remembered to answer, though she wasn’t sure if it was a lie.
“Yes, I trust you, Scratch.”
“Then let’s at least see what Karl Sheppard has to say for himself before we go off the reservation.”
Miller closed her eyes. They flew on through the sky toward Nevada. She listened to the dull, repetitive sound of the rotors, the racket that she had all but drowned out during her intense focus on that shocking conversation. The throbbing was irritating now that she’d noticed it again, and the sound made her head hurt. She wanted to sleep for a month.
Before she could respond, Scratch said, “Besides, it’s not like we’re going anywhere until we land. We could try, I guess, but that first step is a damn doozey.” His eyes twinkled. He squeezed her hand tightly. Only Scratch seemed to fully understand what they were asking.
Miller squeezed back reluctantly. “It seems the decision has been made for me.” She sat back in her seat. “Okay, Scratch. Let’s go talk to Karl.”
CHAPTER NINE
RESEARCH BASE TK-501, NEVADA
CODENAME: CRYSTAL PALACE
The huge overhead hangar doors groaned loudly then closed with a thud just as the Black Hawk’s rotors sputtered into silence. Miller stared out the window. Her mind was still in shock. Crystal Palace had
not
been destroyed. They had landed smack dab in the middle of the brightly lit facility, a space bigger than two football fields laid side by side. It had been cleaned up, freshly painted and was once again filled with hurrying figures in uniforms and white lab coats. It was as if all that death and destruction had never taken place. Miller swallowed dryly. She struggled to block how the base had looked the last time she had been there—grotesque, unthinkably gory, packed with bodies of both the dead and the undead. The now neat and functional military base had been riddled with bullet holes back then, many of them contributed by Scratch when he’d decided to unleash an entire ammo box of .50 cal on an oncoming horde of zombies.
“Penny?”
Miller heard Scratch from far away. She was unable to respond. Crews had to have been working round the clock to have accomplished this much in so short a time. Only a few months later, the base looked brand new. Their last visit had been at night, in the dark, with only Rat’s team to protect them—they had been denied access to weapons at first, for some ungodly reason, though now that fact made more sense to Miller. Their mission had been a fraud from the start, though only half of Rat’s team had known that. Those men had been ordered to betray them and leave Miller, Rat, Sheppard, Terrill Lee, and Lovell behind, apparently to be incinerated when the nuclear device they’d brought exploded; a device that should have converted the hangar into a smoking, radioactive hole. There had never been a nuclear bomb. The base was still here, standing tall and USA proud. Miller struggled to accept this new reality. Crystal Palace had been sure as shit eradicated, along with the entire state of Nevada. It couldn’t be there. She closed her eyes, took a deep breath, and opened them again.
Wrong.
The hangar was there.
It seemed entirely undamaged. Crystal Palace was clean and did not reek of decomposing bodies. Workers in all sorts of uniforms scurried from place to place like cockroaches when the kitchen light flicks on. Miller studied the crowds. She spotted every conceivable kind of military uniform, even a few civilian uniforms like law enforcement and emergency services, and quite a few contractors in civvies or plain mercenary fatigues. The activity was frantic, intense enough that the arrival of a Black Hawk with civilians aboard was so unremarkable as to draw very little attention from the workers.
“Do you need help with that harness, Penny?” It was Rat, suddenly very close. She sat down next to Miller.
“What?” Miller was still sitting in her canvas jump seat on the helicopter, staring out the window. Everyone else was outside, waiting for her on the tarmac. Scratch stood apart from the others. He was looking around in shock, mouth wide open, kind of like a teenage boy finding his first porn site. He was also clearly struggling to absorb their surroundings. Miller slapped at the quick release for her harness, and it fell away smoothly. She composed herself and addressed Rat.
“Where to?”
“Debriefing first,” Rat said, “then you can change and get some hot chow.”
“Good. I’m hungry enough to eat a pot pie full of radioactive pig slop.”
Rat frowned. “Are you feeling unusually hungry? Karl Sheppard briefed me on your condition while you and I were separated. Unusual hunger could be a symptom of the viral accelerant still in your system. Do you need medical attention?”
“What? No. I need to eat, that’s all.” Miller stood up and squared her shoulders. Those on the tarmac turned to stare. She stepped off the now-quiet helicopter with her head high, dignity more or less intact. Miller paused at the bottom of the steps. “Listen, Rat? Don’t you go and start mothering me. I got more than enough of that crap from Sheppard, and I’m still on the right side of dirt. Where is that son of a bitch, anyway?”
“The son of a bitch in question is right here, Sheriff,” came a familiar voice.
Miller spun around. She was stunned again to find Sergeant Karl Sheppard standing behind her. He was wearing Army BDUs and sporting a fresh military haircut. He looked healthy and happy. His brown eyes were twinkling.
Miller wrapped him in a bear hug.
“I’m so glad you’re okay, Penny,” squeaked Sheppard, with a grin. His arms flopped at his sides, pinned in place.
Sheppard looked as handsome as ever. He’d even grown a few grey hairs at his temples. Miller resisted the urge to kiss him. Instead, she just said, “Boy, I am hot damn happy to see you.”
Scratch looked a tad jealous.
“I got one question, Karl.” Miller took Sheppard by the shoulders, looked deep into his eyes. “Why the hell didn’t you wait for Scratch and me back at the lodge in Colorado?”
“Penny, I explained that to you,” Rat said from a few yards away. “We were being overrun at the time and…”
Miller glared Rat into silence. “Yes,
you
explained. Now I want to hear it from him.”
“Penny,” Sheppard said. ”I’m so sorry we had to leave you behind. We
were
being overrun at the chopper, and by both the zombies and those crazy survivalists. We had the two young boys with us, and had to make an executive decision. We all knew that taking off was the right thing to do, but we returned after a while and then stayed in the area searching for you.”
“How long did you try?”
“As long as we still had enough fuel to make it back to safety, we searched for you two. I assure you. Rat, Lovell, and I were heartbroken when we couldn’t find you guys in the aftermath of the fire. Even that brat Jimmy seemed upset when we flew away—though it’s hard to tell with that kid. He takes after his father.”
Scratch snorted. “Up yours, Karl. You got a problem with me, fine. I'm sure young Jimmy does too. But you don't ever talk shit about my son, especially when he isn't here to defend himself.”
Sheppard smiled. He turned his attention back to Miller. “Penny, I can’t tell you how happy we all were to read it when the National Guard posted your location in the survivor database.”
“You have a survivor database?”
“Listen,” Sheppard said, “we should all go to the conference room to continue this discussion. Some of what I need to tell you is still restricted, so this is not the time or the place.” He executed a perfect about-face, like a man used to command, and signaled that they should follow him. Miller and Scratch exchanged glances. Karl Sheppard had changed.
“By the way, you’ve done wonders with the place,” Scratch said, dryly.
“Wait until you see what we’ve accomplished here.” Sheppard seemed to have missed the sarcasm. He led the way across the tarmac. People bustled by with note pads and tablet computers.
As they walked on, Miller commented, “You know, this is the first time I’ve been in this joint where I haven’t been a prisoner, an experiment, or just plain zombie bait. It’s kind of a weird experience.”
Sheppard looked back over his shoulder. “I can understand that. Everyone here is working hard to erase one very ugly past. And it is my hope that you will eventually feel as comfortable and at home here as I do.”
That statement made Miller pause. She whispered to Scratch “I don’t know about ever feeling ‘at home.’ Not here.”
“Yeah, ol’ Karl is giving me the creeps. He’s acting like the Wizard of Oz.” Scratch squeezed Miller’s hand.
Sheppard took them across the vast hanger. They made their way through a huge set of double metal doors squatting directly below a large picture window set into the upper floor of the underground base. Miller saw no bullet holes or bloodstains. They led into a brightly lit corridor with stainless steel walls and a concrete floor. Miller couldn’t remember exactly what this particular corridor had looked like the last time. The few times she had been through it, the hallway had either been dark or she’d been all doped up and strapped to a gurney. Either way, she hadn’t really been looking at the décor. And she wasn’t now. Her mind vaguely registered white walls and tiled floors and metal railings and bars. Doors, all about the same, then long rows of nothing again. What was it about military installations that made originality and color off limits?
That strange, paranoid feeling returned out of nowhere. Miller just couldn’t take it all in. Sudden visions of zombies coming at her from all directions bombarded her mind. She had to fight to shake off the memories. Perhaps she did have PTSD, but she still didn’t trust Rubenstein in any way. It made sense. Flashbacks would hardly be surprising. Miller could almost feel the zombies nearby. Was that her imagination again, a new reality, or just old-fashioned paranoia? Miller rubbed her arms. She felt hungry and cold and scared. This place was not safe. No place was safe.
Sheppard continued to lead the way. As they passed other soldiers in the corridor, several of them saluted. One man was a lieutenant, and Miller noted that he saluted Sheppard first. Miller didn’t know much about military life except what she’d picked up from one of Terrill Lee’s incessant hobbies, but as she remembered it subordinate officers saluted first. Had Sgt. Sheppard gotten a big promotion? What had she missed?
They finally arrived at a door marked Conference Room. Sheppard opened the door with a flourish. Bright lights, more white walls. They walked in and Miller immediately recognized the space. It was the room where Ripper, Brubeck, and Psycho had trapped Miller, Scratch, Terrill Lee, Sheppard, Rat, and Lovell. They’d then locked them up to anticipate dying in the coming nuclear explosion—one that never happened. Which raised another question, if that nuke was never intended to go off, what had been the point of locking them in that room in the first place? Was someone coming back for them later? Were they to be taken prisoner at some point? Several of the mercenaries had been left in the dark as to their true mission. Someone must have known. Unfortunately, Ripper, Brubeck, Psycho, and their boss, Gifford, were all dead-dead now, not just the walking-around kind of dead. They wouldn’t be talking. Maybe Rat knew the whole story. Or maybe not. It made Miller’s head spin.
“I see you cleaned up the dead bodies in the corner,” said Miller.
“It was a big job,” Sheppard said, “just one of many.” He made a face like he didn’t care to discuss that subject.
Sheppard faced her fully. Miller could see why the lieutenant outside had saluted him.
“Looks like you got yourself some railroad tracks, Sergeant.”
Sheppard glanced down at the captain’s bars on his shoulders. “Yeah, it was sort of a surprise. I’ll get to that soon. Please have a seat.”
Miller, Scratch, Alex, Rat, and Lovell all perched on chairs. Lovell looked bored. Miller noticed that he’d expressed little interest in her, which seemed surprising considering all they’d been through in the past. He was a professional first. She supposed it was all about money again. Rat certainly seemed to feel that way.
Sheppard assumed a position at the head of the room. He looked comfortable and in charge. Miller noticed that Rubenstein was sitting at the far end of the table. Why had he been included? Scratch shook his head silently, signaling Miller to let it go for now. Miller ignored him.
“I didn’t realize the good doctor would be joining us,” Miller purred. Her eyes seemed to burn wide holes in the atmosphere.
Sheppard frowned, but quickly regained his composure. “Dr. Rubenstein is here at my request.”
“He should be in a prison cell awaiting a particularly short military trial,” said Alex, “followed by a summary execution. I volunteer for the firing squad.” It was the first time the younger man had spoken since they’d arrived. His tense voice finally focused the meeting.
“We have so much to cover.” Sheppard sighed. “All right, let’s start in the middle, then.” He looked at each one of them in turn, finally settling on Scratch and Miller. “Like it or not, we need Dr. Rubenstein. He is part of the team.”
“Was he part of the team when he was doing illegal experiments on falsely-imprisoned human subjects?” Alex demanded.
“I can understand why you’re all upset.” Sheppard hesitated. “However, what Dr. Rubenstein did was technically legal.”
Miller, Scratch, and Alex began shouting at once. Rubenstein shrank into his chair. Hearing the sound, an armed guard stuck his head in the door. Karl Sheppard waved the man away. Voices overran one another as they released their pent-up frustration and rage. Finally Sheppard put up his hands. Miller and Scratch sat down again. The explosion faded.
“Calm down,” Sheppard shouted, commandingly. “We’re doing this out of order. Please, let me just explain.”
“Explain what?” demanded Alex. “A girl named Leslie and I were hauled off the street in broad daylight, strapped to beds, and injected with God-knows-what, and she got bit to death. Now you’re telling me someone authorized that? Something like that would take nothing less than a presidential order, and even then it would be completely unconstitutional!” He glared at Rubenstein. “Did you have a presidential order, you pompous asshole?”
Sheppard spoke instead. “Well, yes and no.”
“Yes and no?” Miller was stunned. She was tired of hearing that phrase.
“I’m sorry I won’t be able to show you the exact order,” said Sheppard. “It’s classified. Believe me, both the cover-up of the plague and the search for a cure are appropriate and fully legal. We have the backing of both the President and Congress. With the zombies rapidly becoming a disaster of historical proportions, we are virtually in a state of war. I doubt anyone could successfully challenge the constitutionality of this order.”
“Okay, but then where does the
no
part come in, Karl?” Scratch asked.
“Well, it’s complicated. The command of the operation—and the necessary budget appropriations—is headquartered at the air base at Mountain Home, Idaho.”
BOOK: The Hungry 4: Rise of the Triad (The Sheriff Penny Miller Series)
6.26Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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