“It’s hidden.”
“Jesus, Martin, I didn’t even know you owned a gun.”
There’s a lot you don’t know, Martin thought.
“Look, hon, I understand you’re angry, but this isn’t the time for righteous indignation. If that is Meadow out there, we need to find our camp, get the gun. That’s the only way we’ll have a chance against those people.”
Martin held Sara’s elbow, felt her tense up.
“Look,” he said, keeping the edge out of his voice, “I was a Boy Scout, remember? My brother and I both got our rifle shooting merit badges. I know how to use weapons, safely. And this could be Meadow’s only hope.”
He heard her sigh, and she stopped tugging against him. “How do we find camp?”
“The orange ribbons.”
“I’ve been looking for those for more than an hour.”
“I’m pretty sure I know where one is. Come on.” He walked back toward Laneesha, spoke quietly. “You doing okay?”
“This is one fucked up trip, Martin.”
Martin kept the smile off his face because it would have hurt too much. “That it is. Sara? The flashlight?”
She handed it over. Martin walked past, through a patch of dogwood, and found the large elm tree he remembered tying a ribbon to earlier. Sure enough, the reflective orange strip was wound proudly around the trunk.
“The next one should only be a few yards away,” he said. “Let’s all stick together, and try to stay quiet.”
Something touched Martin’s hand, and he flinched at both the surprise and the jolt of pain. He spun, saw Sara at his side.
Her touch was gentle but firm. Much as it hurt, he grasped her hand back.
Tyrone pushed Cindy behind him, standing between her and the three men. He’d never seen cannibals before, but this trio looked just like he pictured they would. The dirt on their tattered clothing wasn’t dirt at all, but dried blood. Their beards and hair were tangled with burrs and twigs. Each had crazy eyes, like that nutcase Charles Manson Tyrone saw on an old Geraldo rerun. The one in the middle—the one with the knife and fork—was actually drooling.
Tyrone reflexively reached for his hip, but there was no weapon. The only weapon nearby was currently roasting on a burning log in the campfire. On the one hand, Tyrone had no idea what the heat had done to the mechanisms and the bullets. He didn’t want to depend on a pistol and have it jam on him, or worse, blow up in his hand.
On the other hand, he didn’t want to be eaten.
He quickly picked up one of the sticks they’d used for marshmallows and nudged the pistol off the log and through the ash, to cool ground, one eye on the cannibals. They just stood there, staring. Then the one with the cutlery spoke, his wet dry and raspy.
“Give us the girl, we’ll let you go.”
He smiled when he said it, revealing a witch’s mouth of blackened and missing teeth. Tyrone felt Cindy press against him.
“That ain’t gonna happen.”
The drool dribbled down the man’s beard. “Then you both die.”
Tyrone shook his head. “That ain’t happenin’ neither.”
The cutlery man grunted at his two companions, and they each walked off in a different direction. Circling the campfire, moving toward Tyrone and Cindy.
Tyrone dug a hand in his pocket, pulled out the lining, and ripped. It tore away.
“Y’all don’ wanna do this.”
“Yes we do.” The cutlery man reached into his pants and pulled out—
No fucking way, Tyrone thought. It’s a salt shaker.
The two men flanking them came in low and slow, stalking like lions. The cutlery man stood his ground, cutting off that escape route. In just a few moments, Tyrone and Sara would be surrounded in a tightening triangle.
Go time.
Wearing the ripped pocket like a sock puppet, he bent down and grabbed the pistol.
The cloth offered some protection from the heat, but in the time it took Tyrone to raise the gun and seek the trigger, the pain became overpowering and he dropped it between his feet.
None of the cannibals reacted to Tyrone’s attempt, not even pausing in their approach.
“Shit,” Tyrone said. Again he reached for the gun.
It felt like holding a hot coal, and every instinct, every nerve in his body, screamed at him to drop it, to pull away from the pain.
Tyrone grimaced, aimed, fighting to hold on, his finger frantically seeking the trigger, trying to get it inside the trigger guard…
And he dropped it again.
His hand was definitely burned, and he felt that sick dizzy feeling of being badly injured. He chanced a look. The cloth of the pocket had burned away in spots, revealing bloody blisters.
The cannibals now had them surrounded.
Tyrone stared down at the gun, gritting his teeth, his hand twitching. He needed to pick that son of a bitch up, but his brain and his body were deadlocked. Even as he bent for it a third time, his hand refused to go near it.
So Tyrone grabbed it lefty.
This time his finger got inside the trigger guard on the first try, and the gun was already cocked, making the pull easy. He raised, aimed, and fired in less than two seconds. The weapon kicked in his hand, and he let it go again, it falling to the ground beside him.
His target, the cannibal approaching on their right, jerked his head back. The bullet hit him just above his right eye. He stood there for a moment, then dropped like his strings had been cut, flopping onto his knees, then his side.
Tyrone had both hands to his face, blowing on them, eyeing the next immediate threat while psyching himself up to reach for the gun again.
But there was no next threat. Rather than continue their attack, the cutlery man and his companion slunk over to their fallen comrade.
The knife and fork flashed in the firelight. Tyrone refused to watch, pulling his shirt up over his head, backing up, and wrapping the hot gun in the fabric.
He heard Cindy gag. “Oh…my god…”
“Don’ look at them.”
“They’re eating him.”
Tyrone kept his eyes averted. “We gotta get outta here. When I say run, we run.”
“He’s still wiggling. Tyrone, he’s not even dead yet.”
Tyrone stared into the woods. They were dark. Too dark. Without light they’d be walking around in circles. He needed a torch.
“Gimme your shirt,” Tyrone said. He turned and stared at Cindy. She was watching the cannibals, her face a mask of horror and revulsion. He gently touched her chin, turning her face toward his.
“Cindy. I need your shirt.”
She nodded, lifting it up over her head. In just her bra she looked smaller and younger, and she automatically folded her arms, either out of cold or shame.
Tyrone located the half-full bag of marshmallows near the fire. He had no idea if this idea would work, but he knew from recent experience these things burned nice and slow. He wrapped Cindy’s shirt around the bag, then tied that to the end of a two foot branch from their firewood pile.
When he placed the branch in the flames to ignite it, he chanced another look at the cannibals, just to make sure they weren’t planning another attack.
The cutlery man’s mouth was full, his cheeks distended. Blood dribbled down his face, mingling with the drool. He noticed Tyrone gaze, and while watching him, shook some salt onto something red and shiny he held in his hand.
Tyrone felt the bile churn in his stomach. He picked up the torch, tucked the shirt and gun under his armpit, and told Cindy it was time to go.
Twenty yards into the forest, Tyrone dropped the gun, dropped the torch, and fell to his knees and vomited.
Cindy knelt next to Tyrone, patting his back, comforting him until he was ready to go on.