Read Zombie Fighter Jango #1 The Road to Hell Is Paved With Zombies Online

Authors: Cedric Nye

Tags: #Adventure, #Horror, #Science Fiction

Zombie Fighter Jango #1 The Road to Hell Is Paved With Zombies (16 page)

“We need higher ground to see, don’t we?” I say.

And it hits me. Why Brenda asked Jon and me to go with Stuart and not Carl. Why Stuart has been agreeable, but vague. Why we aren’t heading towards the college campus and the laptop batteries we need that could be there.

“What are you going to show us?” I ask Stuart.

“Better just to see it,” he replies. I catch the hint of a smile. He knows I’ve figured it out.

Jon looks at me, and then to Stuart. “What am I missing?”

“Help me up and let’s get moving,” I say.

Jon helps me to my feet and I’m surprised my hand doesn’t hurt more than it does. I can’t say the same for my leg. It throbs and feels hot. I know Jon cleaned it, but who knows what was on those spikes. I start to walk, but stop immediately. Not from pain, but from revulsion.

“Jon,” I say, “pull out the back of my shirt.”

Jon looks at me and then at Stuart. Stuart just shrugs.

“Any particular reason, Hoss?” he asks. “I don’t think now is the time to get your kink on.”

“Please,” I say, trying not to shudder, “I think there’s something down my back.”

I know what it is. Ugh. I know what it is.

Jon pulls my shirt from out of my jeans and I hear the wet flop.

“Oh, damn,” Jon says, and then hushes up as he tries not to laugh. “That sucks.”

“It’s a tongue, isn’t it?” I ask. Jon nods. “I feel so dirty.”

“Don’t be a wimp,” Stuart says. “You’ve had worse splattered on you.”

“From Zs,” I say, shaking myself a little, trying to get rid of the heebie-jeebies.

“You going to be okay?” Jon asks.

“Yep,” I nod.

“Good,” Jon says, as we make our way around the dead kids. “What about these bodies? Zs will be on them soon. That’s gonna make the area less secure and our way home a little harder.”

“I have a feeling there aren’t any Zs close by,” Stuart says. “At least not free roaming.”

“Free roaming?” I ask. “What are they? Chickens?”

Stuart actually smiles at this. It’s a little more than off putting.

“You may be more right than you know,” Stuart says.

“Don’t do that,” Jon says. “Seriously.”

Stuart’s smile goes away quickly and his eyes narrow.

“Come on.”

We hike up the long, winding street until we reach a large colonial house. Three stories with wide decks on the back, Stuart leads us through the gate and up the back stairs to the top most deck. As soon as he looks out and below, he hisses and waves us down. My leg hurts like hell.

“You cool?” Jon asks.

“Right as rain,” I smile.

“Shit,” Stuart says. “Shit shit shit. Get down.”

We flatten ourselves on the deck boards and crawl to the edge for a better view. What I see takes my breath away. I can hear Jon’s gasp and I look over at Stuart.

“How long have you known about this?”

“Not long,” he says. “Melissa and the scavenging crew have avoided North Asheville for months because it’s pretty picked over. I came out here a week and a half ago just to be alone.”

“You know you can just not answer your door,” Jon says. “It’s safer to be alone in your own living room.”

“Unlike the rest of you,” Stuart says. “I have no illusions of safety in Whispering Pines. I come out here to train and stay sharp. I have bags packed and weapons ready at a moment’s notice.”

“Jeez,” Jon says, “that’s no way to live.”

Stuart grunts in response and then looks down at the lake below. We do also, and I begin to study what I am seeing.

Beaver Lake is a small lake, about the size of an oval football field. It’s man made and can be filled and drained in less than 24 hours. Right now, it is drained. Yet it’s filled too.

“Are all of those Zs?” Jon asks.

“Yes,” Stuart replies, “but they weren’t there when I first came here. The wall was, and the guards, but not the Zs.”

Surrounding the lake is a massive wall cobbled together from all sorts of materials. Steel, wood, aluminum, car hoods, reinforced chain link, stone, and brick. Guards are posted every twenty feet at least. And these guys look like business. Semi-automatic rifles, body armor, some have helmets and goggles. Even from up here, I can catch the occasional squelch from a walkie-talkie. Which means they have power available to them somewhere.

“You brought us here to analyze and assess what they were building, right?” I ask Stuart. He nods. “But it looks like we now know what they were building.”

“The real question is why,” Jon states.

“I think I know why,” Stuart says. “The real question is when.”

“How do you mean?” Jon asks.

While Jon and Stuart talk, I have been busy doing a quick calculation.

“7,000,” I say.

“What?” Jon asks.

“God,” Stuart responds, “that many then?”

“At least,” I say.

Jon looks at me then down at the dry lake. “Are you saying there’s 7,000 Zs down there? My Lord.” He looks at Stuart. “So you know the why, but want to know the when? I’d like to know the answers to both of those questions.”

“They’re making a herd,” I say. “They are weaponizing the Zs.”

“Weaponizing? What for? There’s no one to fight. Are they gonna use the Zs against other Zs? Zs don’t fight each other. This doesn’t make sense.”

“Sure it does,” I say, tired of looking down into the lake of undead. I roll over onto my back, which makes my leg feel better, and look up at the blue sky above us. “Resources are finite. That includes armaments. If you wanted to lay siege to a place, you’d need a lot of resources to do it. You have to have more resources than the place you are laying siege to. You have to be able to wait them out.”

I turn my head and see Jon watching me, waiting for me to go on. I do.

“But in this day, no one can afford to waste all of their resources at one time. The key to survival post-Z, is conservation of resources. So you look for a resource that is not only plentiful, but renewable. And the only resource like that anymore is?”

“Zs,” Jon replies. “You don’t mean?”

“Yep,” I answer.

“They are coming for us,” Stuart says. “I didn’t know it before, but I know it now. When I saw that lake empty and those guys building the wall around it, I figured at first it was for us.”

“That they’d come and take Whispering Pines and throw us in there,” I say.

“Yeah,” Stuart nods. “But the more I thought about it, the more it didn’t make sense. Why keep us alive? They’d have to feed us and give us water. It goes back to a waste of resources.”

“You knew we’d find this?” Jon asks. “And you still brought us here?”

“I had hoped we wouldn’t find this,” Stuart says, shaking his head. “And I didn’t want to bring you. But after talking with Brenda-”

“Who else knows?” I ask.

“No one in Whispering Pines,” Stuart replies. “Unless Brenda told someone. I told her I’d keep it secret until everyone absolutely needed to know.”

“So you talked to Brenda and she changed your mind about coming back alone,” I say.

“She said that you two would be the best to bring and help figure this out,” Stuart nods. “Padre here can look and see what the structural integrity of the wall is. Maybe find some weak spots. Maybe see if it has a dual purpose.”

“Dual purpose?” Jon asks. “Like what?”

“I don’t know,” Stuart says. “That’s one of the reason you’re here.”

“And I’m here why?” I ask. “You have always known I’m full of shit and just winging it, Stuart. You’ve never come out and said so, but I’ve guessed that you don’t think very highly of my position in Whispering Pines.”

Stuart looks at me for a long time. Long enough for me to grow uncomfortable.

“I’ve stopped trying to figure you out, Jace,” he finally says. “You don’t fit any mold I know of. I’m a military man and I like everything to fit perfectly. Everything in its place and all that. But you are all over the place.”

“Thanks?” I smile.

“You can seem like the laziest asshole in Whispering Pines, but then you show these bursts of creativity and industry, and all of a sudden, we have a new innovation in the neighborhood. Wi-Fi communication. You spearheaded that. The gate structure. That was you. And the razor wire and fencing is quite possibly the simplest, most genius use of natural topography I have seen.”

“I didn’t come up with any of that,” I say. “Those ideas have already been invented. I just put them into use.”

“No, what you did was search through that wild, information hoarding brain of yours and found solutions, and then,” Stuart said. “And post-Z, solutions are as valuable as bullets.”

“More so,” Jon says. “You can run out of bullets. There’s always a solution.”

“Not always,” Stuart says. He points towards the lake of the undead. “But I’m really hoping there’s a solution to that. I’m counting on it.”

We watch the lake for a long while, each lost in our thoughts. Unfortunately, this internal focus screws us. I know Stuart’s senses are tuned to pick up anything coming for us. He has a sixth sense about danger. But no matter how well trained he is, he never sees this coming.

“There is a gate,” Jon says and we look over at him.

I don’t see the problem at first, but Stuart does. He grabs the binoculars away from Jon’s face and shoves back from the edge.

“Move! Move!” he hisses.

“What? What is your problem?” Jon asks.

“The reflection, you moron!” Stuart says, standing up and hurrying down the stairs. “They saw the damn reflection off your binoculars!”

“How do you know they saw it?” I ask as Jon and I follow him down to the street.

The sound of motorcycle engines revving up answers my question.

“Fuck,” I say as we follow Stuart across the street and up a muddy incline. “Fuck fuck fuck.”

 

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