He was crying out loud as he tried to sever through three inches of his being. The zombie was making short work of the heavy material. Steve was kicking his leg so that the zombie could not seek purchase; he was losing the battle. Steve’s skin split with a wet rip from the pole just as the zombie took a small ribbon of meat from his calf.
“Oh fuck, man!” he yelled as he scrambled to get away from the zombie. One hand was clenched over the wound in his side. The kerosene fire below was threatening to ignite his shoes and the zombies at the top, beginning to realize he was fair game, started to walk into the fire to get at him.
“Xander, Chaz, please help me,” he begged.
Chaz was lost in the depths of his mourning and barely cognizant of the happenings in front of him. Xander had come to the conclusion that if Steve started to burn he wouldn’t even piss on him.
“Come on,” Xander said to Chaz as he led the brother away and to the other side of the yard where the steel framing to the foot bridge still remained. Steve screamed out four more times before either the fire or the zombies devoured him.
Xander made sure he had a handful of Chaz’ shirt at all times as he led the man out of the zombies. The zombies pressed tightly as they passed, sometimes not yielding their spot even after Xander walked into them. He kept his head down thinking that somehow, by not making eye contact, he would not illicit a challenge. The zombies were within tongue range almost constantly and Xander had enough wet marks to prove that they were tasting the validity of the food. He was happy they weren’t like sharks that bit first to determine taste.
Xander almost cried in relief when they made it through the brunt of the zombies and were stopped by a guard.
“Oh thank God,” he said nearly collapsing.
“What happened to the rest of you guys?” the guard asked.
“Dead,” was his one word reply.
“Holy shit, come on follow me. Kong gave us all orders that if any of you stumbled back to come and meet him personally without the woman.” Nobody wanted to use Eliza’s name, as if to speak it was to invoke her presence. And nobody wanted that cold beauty next to them. “Tell Kong I’ve got two coming,” the guard said, speaking into a small two-way radio.
“Roger that, bring them out to Dowboin road and have them wait,” the man on the other end said.
“Chaz, man, you alright?” the guard asked.
“I need to bury my brother,” he answered through a mourning haze.
“We will, man, we will. You want some help carrying him?” the guard asked.
“It’s just for a little while longer I can do it,” Chaz said.
It was another ten minutes through their circuitous route that the men found themselves on the roadway that led into the Talbot compound.
Kong was waiting impatiently. “You can go back to your post,” he told the guard. “What happened?” he asked when the guard was out of range.
“We never had a chance,” Xander said. “They were waiting for us. Killed the first four through the door including Chaz’ brother before we even knew what was going on.”
“And the rest of you?” Kong asked.
“Chaz made us put down our weapons when the guy inside, Mike I think his name was, said that if he wanted to keep his brother alive that’s what we had to do. Chaz shot Ned when he didn’t want to. So when all of our guns were gone, he takes our vials except for Pete’s and Adam’s. Pete shot most of his foot off when he tried to hide his gun and Steve pushed him into the trench, so that he could take his vial.”
“What a cluster fuck, where is Steve?”
“He fell into the pit, a few zombies ate him.”
“Christ on a cracker! What the fuck am I going to tell Eliza? She’ll want me to assemble another team. The men already think this Mike guy is supernatural.”
“He is,” Xander replied.
“What?” Kong asked.
“I’m telling you, man, there’s something different about this guy, he’s not normal. He was just in a gun battle and was as cool as a cucumber. Eliza is as mean as a rattlesnake, he is the rattlesnake. Why are we here Kong? What is it about this guy she hates so much? I think I deserve to know,” Xander said.
“Deserve? You’re better off not knowing,” Kong told him.
“I think we earned the right to know,” Chaz said, standing up from where he had laid his brother down. “Is the bitch even human?”
“I’m telling you, Chaz, you’re better off just leaving it alone,” Kong told him, trying to placate the other man.
“We’ve loaded trailers full of zombies and hauled them close to a thousand miles to fight a guy that has wiped out two insertion teams and killed my brother and you’re telling me to mind my own business? Well fuck you, Kong!” Chaz shouted.
Kong punched the man so hard in the side of the temple, Chaz’ legs locked up before he pitched over. “You got a problem with that?” Kong asked Xander.
Xander was backing up holding his hands in front of him. “No, man.”
“Get him up and help him bury his brother,” Kong said as he turned to relay the bad news to the one really in charge.
“There’s something else, Kong,” Xander said. “The zombies…they’re acting weird. Yeah I know, but even weirder for zombies. There’s a seven- or eight-foot deep trench, and it’s lined with spikes and fire it’s pretty nasty business. The zombies they won’t even try to get over it. They’re just standing there.”
“Are they looking down the trench?” Kong asked.
“No, that’s the thing, I don’t think they give two shits about the trench. They’re every one of them looking up at the house like they’re under a spell or something. It’s fucking creepy. The ones outside the fence keep moving in, then they stop. I noticed it when we were going in, and especially when we were leaving, because we were trying to get around them.”
***
“I expected to have Michael’s head by now,” Eliza said.
Most people would say that as a euphemism, Kong knew she meant it literally. “The team is back.”
“And yet I see none of the Talbots,” Eliza said, looking around with an exaggerated swing of her head.
“Only two of them made it back,” he told her hopelessly, hoping that would appease her.
“Did they exact any type of revenge for their losses?” Eliza asked.
“No,” Kong answered honestly.
“Perhaps some of the Talbots were mortally wounded?” Eliza asked.
“No, Eliza.”
“So twelve of your finest men were slaughtered and it appears that Michael has not so much as suffered a stubbed toe?” she asked, more of a smile showing on her lips than her normal sneer.
“It would appear that way,” he told her, wishing that right now he was anywhere except here. He would gladly even go back to 2005 and relive the worst day of his life over if it would help him escape this hell. He had been living in Connecticut with his wife of seven years—Madeline. He had just accepted a long distance haul to bring components to a Californian firm in Silicon Valley. The pay was something the couple could not refuse, although, being away from home for ten days was not sitting well with him. Leaves blew around his yard on the blustery fall day, his wife blew him a kiss and he pulled out of the driveway.
He had made it all the way to Colorado when he received word from his company that InTech had gone belly up and he was to bring the shipment of electronic components back to the distributor in Massachusetts. His pay would be cut, but it would save him two days away from his home and for that he was grateful.