Think logically. Go. Go!
Could they be trusted? Worchester was her lesson, the error quotient in her trial. Mary had died because she hadn’t been paying attention to the man her friend so desperately claimed was her one true love. He’d shot her dead on sight before she even had the chance to knock the gun out of his hand.
They’re not all like him. They’re not…
Something groaned.
In the near distance, a portion of a giant wall began to move.
“She’s armed,” Jamie said, “and possibly unstable.”
“How do you know that?”
“No one uses a gun, Dakota. No one’s stupid enough to.”
“Unless they’re desperate,” Erik said, sliding a clip into the rifle in his hand.
“Either way, we need to be careful.”
“She’s screamed twice now,” Ian said, grunting as he lifted the gate out of place and began to pull it backward. “What if she’s bit?”
“We’ll deal with it then,” Steve said, taking place beside Ian.
“What do I do?” Desmond asked.
“You stay here,” Jamie said, looking up at Erik and Dakota. “Desmond,” he continued, reaching down to his belt and the holster at his side, “you take my pistol and hold the front gate. The three of us will go.”
“What about us?” Steve gasped.
“You two need to shut the gate if something goes wrong.”
“But what about you?”
“Just do as I say!”
“Yes sir!” Steve said, snapping his wrist to his brow in a salute.
Smirking, Jamie slid a cartridge into his rifle and cocked his gun.
“Let’s go,” he said.
The broken, bloodied bat in her hand, Rose started down the road with her arm slack and her insides tense with anticipation. Her knuckles felt like they would explode out of their joints from the weight of her grip on the bat, but with her gun gone and new, possibly-dangerous men approaching, there was no shortage of nerves coursing through her veins.
They could kill me, she thought, and I’m walking right into a trap.
Would it be so bad though to have it end after so long? Sure, she could be killed, and sure, she could be raped and tortured, but would that really be such a bad thing? At least if she were captured, she would have some security, some safety behind the wall.
“They’re not doing anything,” she whispered to herself. “I’ll fucking kill them if they even try.”
Raising her bat, she locked her other fist around its bloodied handle and braced it in front of her like a sword, ready for whatever was to come.
You are strong, she thought. You are brave.
“You have survived,” she said.
The tip of a military-grade rifle came into view.
Rose braced herself.
“Come out!” she cried. “I’m not afraid of you!”
“She thinks we’re going to do something,” Dakota said. “She thinks we’re going to kill her.”
“No reason for her not to,” Erik said, lowering the tip of his machinegun. “Jamie.”
“We’re not going to hurt you!” Jamie called out, raising a hand before snapping the head of his rifle toward the ground. “My name’s Jamie Marks! I was a corporal in the United States military before—”
A gunshot rang out.
Dakota blinked as smoke drifted before his eyes. He coughed, ears ringing as though his head had just been struck by a church bell.
He caught sight of the smoking barrel of Erik’s machinegun.
“What the fuck are you doing!” Jamie cried.
“Zombie,” Erik replied.
“Where?”
He pointed. A twitching corpse, now relieved of both its legs, lay in the brief space between a house and a garage directly in front of the woman. “It would’ve walked right into her,” Erik said.
“Fucking hell!” the woman cried out.
“She’s English?” Dakota exclaimed.
“What the bloody hell are you doing?” she screamed.
“You’re drawing attention to yourself!” Jamie called back.
“And us!” Erik added, taking a few steps forward. “Listen up because I’m only going to say it once. If you want in, you better come now, otherwise we’re going to close the gate.”
“Erik—”
“Shut up, Jamie. Don’t play hero on me.”
“But—”
“Did you hear me?” Erik called, ignoring Jamie.
“I heard you!” the woman said, turning her head to spit. In that brief moment she turned her head, Dakota took notice of a jagged cut running from her hairline to her jaw, fresh with blood and more than likely harboring infection.
There’s no blood on her face other than there.
Save for the blood on her hands and the slight spatter on her shirt, she seemed perfectly clean, albeit covered in dirt.
“I’m not going to say it again!” Erik cried. “Come now or else.”
The woman let the bat fall at her side.
For a brief moment, Dakota thought she wouldn’t do anything. Then she ran forward as though her life depended on it.
“My name’s Rose,” the woman said, raising her head as Erik began to wipe the blood and dirt from her brow. “I’m from England.”
“England?” Desmond frowned. “How did you get here?”
“By boat.” The woman seemed to consider her words before she burst into laughter. It took her a moment to compose herself, but when she finally did and Erik continued to clean her face, she smiled. “Can you believe that? I came by fucking boat.”
“How?” Jamie asked. “I mean, did you pilot it?”
“I didn’t pilot it, Corporal; it drifted.”
“What?”
“It drifted?” Dakota asked. “How?”
“I have no fucking idea,” Rose said, raising a hand to stop Erik from messing with her face. “All I know is that after everybody died, I was all by myself.”
“How long were you out there?” Erik asked, lowering the dirtied medical gauze.
“In the boat, or out there?” she gestured outside the window.
“The boat.”
“I have no idea. You tell me.”
“It’s been two months since everything happened,” Jamie said, crossing his arms over his chest.
“Two months seems about right,” Rose said, standing. She stripped her torn, bloodied T-shirt over her head and started toward the sink, but stopped before she could make it there. “What’s with the stares? You boys ain’t seen a girl with her shirt off?”
“No,” Jamie said. “It’s not that.”
“Pray tell, officer.”
“Corporal,” Jamie corrected. “And I don’t consider myself to be part of the army anymore.”
“Why’d you introduce yourself as such then?”
“Because I wanted to seem important,” he said. “Because I wanted you to feel safe.”
“I haven’t felt safe since the day Mary’s boyfriend came in and shot her in the face,” Rose said, lifting a bottle of water from the counter. “I’ll get you another one to replace this.”
“Don’t worry about it.”
“Oh, believe me, I’m not.” Chuckling, she uncapped the bottle and poured a few drops in her palms before she began to scrub the dirt off her hands. “You got any disinfectant?”
“Soap will work,” Erik said.