Authors: Mark Campbell
T
he apartment building’s dark staircase was littered with trash
and the iron handrails were covered with rust. Water stained the carpet
and the air reeked of mold.
Witt led the group down to the bottom of the staircase, carefully
scanning the area with his flashlight and shotgun. A chewed-up toothpick
hung out of the corner of his mouth and three pistols were stuck under
his belt. Drawing a fresh loaded gun was faster than reloading.
Jerri followed in the back, a tactical position she was growing
rather tired of. She kept hearing noises behind her and spun around only
to see darkness. It gave her the creeps; the whole building did.
“That doesn’t sound bad,” Jerri said.
Witt laughed.
“It will feel like miles… trust me… out here it is
very
hostile
territory.” He stopped laughing and looked over at Andrew and Jerri.
“Whatever you do… don’t go into
any
of the buildings, avoid dark places,
and stay off of the dirt and sand. We can trick humans, but the zombies
don’t care how many guns we’re packing. Stay close and don’t talk to
anybody. You both understand?”
Most of the buildings were ramshackle and had been gutted by
flames. Many of the doors had been sealed shut by plywood and still had
old orange signs stapled onto them from the pandemic’s onset.
A few of the buildings were wide-open and revealed darkened
hallways and hidden crevices. Muddy footprints and tattered pieces of
clothing led into the dark recesses of the tombs.
Skeletal remains littered the alley and were strewn amongst heaps
of trash sealed inside red biohazard bags. The stench was beyond
description.
They walked past one man who was busy digging in a mound of
garbage, picking through the torn biohazard sacks. He was scrawny,
covered in sores, and had long greasy hair that hung past his shoulders.
He turned his sunburned face towards the group as they walked past,
mouth agape.
The weaponless man looked at Witt and then held up his dirty
hands, shaking his head weakly. He looked away from the group and
started to dig deeper into the trash, scavenging whatever he could find.
Witt, sensing that the man wasn’t a threat, propped his shotgun
back onto his shoulder and kept walking down the alley as he
methodically moved his toothpick from one side of his mouth to the
other with his tongue.
A few burnt vehicles sat on the street, stripped bare. Small groups
of haggard individuals sat huddled in front of the various shattered
storefronts, either staring into nothingness or exchanging meaningless
small talk. Everybody made sure to stay away from the buildings that had
their doors open and everybody kept their voices down.
A tall man pushed a wobbling shopping cart full of jugs of dirty
water down the center of the street, steering the cart around the potholes
that littered the pavement. He was wearing a tattered overcoat and had a
small caliber rifle slung over his shoulder.
“This is everyday life out here,” he said. “You either adapt or you
die. Come on. Let’s walk,” he said as he pointed over at another darkened
alleyway across the street.
“Hey!” Andrew shouted, stumbling backwards. “Watch where
you’re going, you little shit!” He glanced down and noticed that the small
flashlight he once had stuck inside his pocket was gone.
Just as soon as Witt finished crossing the street and reached the
alley, two men emerged from behind a rusty dumpster. Each of the men
held rifles.
One of the men, an elderly black man with gray hair wearing a
Hard Rock Cafe shirt and tattered jeans, pointed his weapon at Witt’s
head.
“We don’t want any trouble,” Witt finally said.
The black man laughed.
Witt shook his head and kept chewing on his toothpick.
“We’ll take another route,” Witt said. “Sorry for disturbing you.”
“The toll?” Andrew asked.
Omar grinned.
“Yeah,” Omar cackled. “How about you give us everything
you’re packing and then we’ll allow you to go find another alleyway.
Otherwise we’ll shoot you and just take it all anyway.”
Before Witt could think of a way to take both men down, the
heavyset white kid stepped towards Jerri and reached towards the bundled
Jacob.
“What do you got hiding in there?” the boy asked. He snatched
Jacob’s shawl and pulled it aside, revealing the baby’s ashen corpse and
sunken eyes.
Jerri looked down at the frightened boy with confusion. Clearly
the boy wasn’t stable. She quickly covered Jacob with the shawl and
tucked the baby against her chest protectively.
“Y-you’s some crazy fuckers… What the fuck is wrong with
you…?” he asked in a shaky voice. “Y-y-you did that to a kid?! You’s
some sick motherfuckers… You in that cult shit aren’t you?”
“That’s right. We needed his blood. So now you know the kind
of sick shit we’ll do to you if you don’t get out of our way,” Witt said in a
growl. He pushed Omar’s shaky rifle aside and walked forward down the
alleyway.
As Witt traversed deeper into the alley and weaved around the
mounds of red plastic bags and shoved aside stacks of cardboard boxes
and old wooden pallets, Andrew and Jerri followed close behind.
“What was all of that about?” Jerri finally asked.
“They were crazy,” Witt said flatly. “That’s all.”
“You played it close,” Andrew said.
Witt nodded.
“The best fights are the ones you win without firing a single
shot,” Witt explained. He grinned. “It almost came to that though. It’s a
cut-throat world out here.”
Jerri was thankful that Jacob was asleep through that ordeal. She
reached a hand under his blanket and tickled his bloated stomach. When
she pulled her hand out from under the blanket she stared at her
fingertips in confusion; they were covered with a thin layer of Jacob’s
skin.
She blinked and sniffed her fingers; they smelled horrible.
Something didn’t feel right, but she brushed it off.
The crows that covered the street took frantic flight and revealed
the horrific scene on the asphalt below, cawing as they ascended into the
sky. Skeletal remains lay strewn all across the pavement, littering the street
for miles. Most of the corpses were laden with supplies but many of them
appeared to have been former shamblers. Each of the corpses had been
shot in the head.
The base was a large complex surrounded by a razorwire-topped
fence. The road was the main thoroughfare into the complex and was
congested by multiple tanks, abandoned Tucson police cruisers, and an
armored SWAT van. The gatehouse next to the road had a tattered
American flag waving above it and had the chain-link fence rolled shut,
preventing anybody from easily entering the complex. A long sign above
the gate read ‘Davis–Monthan Air Force Base – East Entry – Welcome to
the Home of the 355
th
’.
“Well?” Andrew asked.
Witt shook his head.
“We’re going to have to sneak around from the other side and
take them by surprise. They’re keeping a close eye on the main entry,”
Witt said.