Zombie Fallout 9 Read online

Page 19


  “The question you should be asking is, ‘Why aren’t you going like this?’” Gary replied.

  “I could round up five hundred brothers, and I guarantee I would not find as many crazy motherfuckers as are in the house.”

  “That’s true; the average rate of insanity is higher among whites than non-whites.” Trip had ducked under BT’s outstretched arm and walked into the room. “Although, if you can believe it, Genogerians actually have the highest rate of all at a staggering two-point-three percent within their general population. Wait … is that this world?”

  “Did he just say old people are insane?” Gary asked.

  I shrugged. Sometimes you could only take a stab at what Trip was talking about.

  “I’m not sure if I should agree with him or not.” BT looked confused.

  “I wouldn’t. He’ll just change his mind about what he said later.” I figured this for sage advice.

  Ron wanted everyone back on track. “We need to figure out how to get them back.”

  “Through the use of overwhelming force,” Gary said.

  “Nice.” I could get onboard with that plan.

  “Not very helpful,” Ron chided him. Gary looked slightly deflated.

  “He’s actually on to something. You’ve seen it yourself; these new zombies aren’t big on taking casualties. They are apparently becoming self-aware. Wow, I did not realize just how scary that sounded until I said it. Fuck. Anyway, umm … where was I? Yeah if they’re getting routed, they will withdraw. We just need to show them the door so to speak.”

  “Do we leave the house?”

  “We can’t leave it completely unguarded, but I think if a few of us head out now, we could be back before dark with the rest of our families.”

  “I’ve got something that might help.” Mad Jack beamed. He handed us small boxes about the size of a garage door remote.

  “And these are?” I asked him. He looked at us like we were supposed to know what they did.

  I noticed Trip was repeatedly pressing the green button on the side. I was thankful it was not a personal detonation device used to blow yourself up in case of an emergency.

  “Zombie repellers shrunk down!” He beamed.

  I was skeptical. We’d had mixed results thus far. I mean sure, practice makes perfect, but when a failed experiment could lead to death, one got wary.

  “I improved the battery life and the odds of a fire have been halved.”

  “Halved you say? And what were the odds of a fire before the improvements?”

  He didn’t look too particularly pleased to answer that question. He turned his head and mumbled a number.

  “He said sixty-three percent.” Trip was drinking something that looked like ice cream.

  “We have chocolate chip ice cream?” Travis asked.

  Tommy pulled him away when my son reached for it. He shook his head. “It’s milk.”

  What I thought had been a whiff of zombie wafted by my nose. I now realized it was old and curdled milk, with some sort of foreign object in it, probably fly larvae.

  “We need to save them, if only to get Stephanie back and rein his fool ass back in.” BT could not get far enough away from Trip. He covered his nose with his hand.

  I nearly forgot about the box in my hand. “Wait, sixty-three percent chance of bursting into flame, really?”

  “Yeah, but I halved it.”

  “Oh great, so there’s only a one in three chance of this thing bursting into a white phosphorous grenade then?”

  “Thirty-one point six seven is not one in three,” he said indignantly. “And it does not burn like a phosphorous grenade. The wearer would suffer no more than a second-degree burn roughly the size of a bowling ball.”

  “Oh, is that all? And what of the bite marks from the zombies nearby?”

  “Well, that would be an unfortunate side-effect.”

  “Did he just call getting eaten by zombies a side-effect?” BT looked like he was about to take up arms.

  I smiled. Sure, it was serious business, but the sight of BT about to lose his fucking mind was priceless.

  “What if I were to wear two; that way if one burned up, I’d have a spare?” I asked.

  “Oh, I wouldn’t do that.” He sounded very troubled by that thought but did not elaborate before leaving. He oftentimes did that. I don’t think he meant it as a slight. I just think he had the social graces of a pre-pubescent boy suffering from crippling shyness mixed in with the attention span of a moth.

  “He’s a weird bird,” Trip said before taking in his last big gulp of whatever the hell he had in that glass. Hearing the thick liquid slide down his throat threatened to loosen my lunch’s hold within my stomach. He smacked his lips and rubbed his belly. “What did I just eat?”

  “Are you seriously thinking about using these things?” BT looked on the verge of smashing his against the floor like a television remote after his favorite team lost in the playoffs because of a bad call.

  “It still works two out of three times.” I said, thinking I did more to rev him up than calm him down.

  “We still need to get out of here.” Ron brought the discussion back full circle. “Just because they’ve withdrawn doesn’t mean they’ve given up.”

  “That’s why I’m wearing this!” Gary thumped himself in the chest with a hockey stick I’d yet to have seen. He winced from the strike.

  “You all right?” Meredith asked him.

  “I’m fine,” he forced out.

  This was not a good scenario. We had already split the group, and we were going to do so again. The house would be undermanned while we made our rescue attempt. There was no doubt it had to happen. We just couldn’t go about this the traditional Mike Talbot way.

  “It might be better to leave them where they are?” Tommy paced around the room, not focusing on any one thing, at least not in this realm.

  “What the hell does that mean?” Ron was not too thrilled with the prospect of leaving his wife alone.

  “They’ll be fine for at least a week,” he said, never looking at anybody.

  “And then what?” Ron asked.

  “Then? Then they might be on their own.” Tommy left the room.

  “Duh, duh, duh!” Trip sang the words. “That sounds ominous! They usually play that music in the movie when someone is about to jump out of a closet.” Trip’s gaze immediately went to the outside door. He stared at that thing longer than I figured he could until what I thought would happen happened. “Are we waiting on pizza?” he asked. “My stomach hurts. I maybe shouldn’t have had that second blueberry and mayonnaise smoothie.” He went in the same direction as Tommy, although I think he was heading for a bathroom. I had no idea where Tommy went, probably the roof to get better reception for whatever signal he was tuning in to.

  “Okay, so we don’t need them to leave. We just need them to clear a path. We mount a few of these incendiary devices on the car.”

  “They’re not incendiary devices!” Mad Jack yelled.

  “Shit, when did you come back in?” I’d been busted. “Okay, we mount some of these zombie repellers-slash fire bombs.”

  “Talbot, why are you prodding the genius? This is what makes them evil.” BT was getting in on the goading.

  “You don’t understand the load the circuitry is under for the signal that needs to be produced. The right components for this job haven’t even been made yet. I’m working with prototypes here. That any of them work is a testament to my….”

  “It’s okay, Mad Jack. Don’t get your pocket protector all twisted in knots.” I walked over to him. He was not a fan of good-natured ribbing, and I’d be damned if I indeed made him an evil genius and awoke to see that he had teleported me to an alternate realm where maybe aliens ruled or I was haunted by ghosts. Zombies were bad enough; I’d leave it at that. “Listen, these boxes have saved our ass a couple of times, and we appreciate the hell out of them. Okay?”

  He nodded quickly and pushed up on frames for g
lasses that weren’t there. “Okay,” he echoed. I looked sternly over to BT, who I’m sure was about to undo my gesture of good will.

  “Ron, I’m going to need a truck.”

  “Of course you are.” He sighed.

  “I’ll be gentle.”

  “I’m running out of trucks, Mike.”

  “We’ll get more.”

  “It’s not the same thing.”

  I get that there’s a certain satisfaction to going and buying a car that you’ve worked hard for. You appreciate something more when you’ve earned it. But there was this little button in my brother that no matter how hard I tried to press it, it would not depress. The world was different. A lot of those old ways of thinking were no longer relevant. Sure, we still needed to hold on to faith and morals, compassion, the things that made us decent human beings, but the other shit, the pursuit of material things, appearances, keeping up with the Joneses … those things made no sense anymore. Everything we did was purely about survival. Being the first child, he’d always been an overachiever, and his hard work was supposed to mean more than just “making it.” I could see his angle. It just wasn’t valid anymore, and that pissed him off to no end.

  “It’s the truck or our families; what’s more important?” I don’t think I meant to strike that quick and hard at his jugular. Maybe I did. His eyes shot to mine, full of anger and resentment, and then immediately cooled to reason. Now that I had him, I was going to go full bore. “I need the Gatling gun as well.”

  BT’s air sucking-in sound wasn’t helping my cause. I pressed on.

  “I need to plow the field so to speak. I need it to mow down all the zombies in the road leading up here. I don’t make it out of here, they’re all screwed.”

  Ron stood, pushing himself away from the table. “Fine, Mike. Take my truck. Take my gun. Why don’t you take my Rolex as well? Make a clean sweep of everything I’ve worked for in my life. That’s what you do, isn’t it? Just take? You’ve been doing it your entire life. Why work hard when people are just going to hand you shit? Isn’t that your motto? Oh, Mike, he’s the baby of the family. We have to look out for him. We have to help him. Look how far that got you in life. Couldn’t hold a decent job to save your life, could you? Just a couple of years ago, you had to call Mom and Dad and ask for money so your family could eat. How pathetic is that? Forty and can’t provide for his own!”

  “Ron, that’s enough.” BT stepped closer.

  “You don’t know shit, BT,” Ron spat. “His entire life, he’s skated on the backs of those carrying the rink. And it’s never enough. He always wants more, and somehow us idiots keep giving it to him. My father worked his ass off providing for our family. He did an admirable job. We ate and we had a roof over our head. But you don’t know how many times those basic necessities were threatened by Mike. His legal expenses siphoned off a good portion of our parents’ savings. Or how Mike defaulted on his car loan and my parents, being the good little co-signers that they are, had to foot the bill. Mike has always been about Mike. He places himself above all others, no matter the cost.”

  “You’re a damn fool,” BT said, pointing a meaty finger in Ron’s face. “I’ve personally seen him put himself in harm’s way more times than I can count to save someone.”

  “Yeah?” Ron questioned. “Did he do it for him or for them?”

  “What the hell are you talking about? He saved them.”

  “I’m saying, ‘Did he save them for himself or for them?’”

  “What you’re asking makes no sense.”

  “Sure it does. Mike would save his family and friends at all costs because he would not want to put himself through the pain and suffering of watching a loved one die.”

  “That’s not always the case. I’ve seen him risk his life for those he barely knows.”

  “And by doing so, it fans the flames of his ego, which burns as bright as the sun. He does what he does so that he appears as if legend. Isn’t that it, Mike? If you can’t actually do in this life, then there’s always the smoke and mirrors routine.”

  I’d had enough. I can absorb a few punches if it allows someone the opportunity to vent, but Ron looked like he was just getting started. “Let’s get a few things clear, brother.” Ron was about to speak. “No, it’s time for you to shut the fuck up while I say my piece. You got yours; I get mine. Yeah, was I a dumb kid? Sure was. Did I cost Mom and Dad a shitload in legal fees? Again, a big yes. In fact, close to thirty grand, which, if you had bothered to ask, I had paid back all but five grand before I got laid off the last time. As for the Jeep, after Dennis totaled it, I had two options. Either have him thrown in jail for drunk driving and stealing my car or pay for the damages out of pocket. Yeah, Mom and Dad paid for it up front, then Dennis and I paid it back. You do realize at that time we were both working for Dad’s construction company? No? You missed that part? As for asking Mom and Dad for money when I got laid off, yeah I did.

  “We were in fucking trouble. I couldn’t make the house payment. I was doing odd jobs and spending every waking hour looking for work. Do people sometimes need help? Yeah, man, they do. We’re not all born with a silver fucking spoon in our mouth. Oh, don’t go giving me that butt-hurt expression on your face. You were always the golden child, the one that could do no wrong. Everything you ever received growing up was brand fucking new. You ever get a fifth-generation hand-me-down bike that’s about ten years out from the newest version? It had no fucking pedals, Ron! All I could do was walk the thing up hills and glide down. As for saving my family and friends, why the fuck would anyone want to go through the pain of watching someone they cared for die? That makes absolutely no fucking sense. Am I being selfish because of that? I don’t know. Maybe that’s the definition of it, but sure, I’d rather die trying to save them rather than be safe and sound while they were in danger. As for saving those I didn’t know, I don’t know what skewed version of me you have, but I don’t do it because I want to be written about in textbooks. I do it because it’s the right fucking thing to do, you asshole. It’s not my fault your expensive college degree isn’t worth too much in this new world, not my fucking fault at all. Speaking of which, Ron, how much did that degree cost? I don’t seem to remember you having to repay your college loans like I did. Was that a gift from Mom and Dad? You know what? You can shove your truck and your gun up your ass. I’ll walk out of here. I’ll get your wife and your kid back here, and then I’m leaving. I honestly didn’t know you thought so fucking little of me. I’ve always looked up to you. I should have realized you were looking down at me.” He reached over; this time it was my turn to leave the room.

  “Shit.” I was outside Ron’s storage area. I truly meant what I’d said about walking out of here. But I still needed a rifle and a ton of ammo, and there really wasn’t a way for me to ask for it.

  “Hey, Dad.” Travis came up by my side.

  “Hey, Kiddo.”

  “You all right?”

  “I’m good,” I told him, putting my arm around his shoulder. “I’ll be better when we have you mom, brother, and sister back, and I guess nephew now. Hey, while you’re here, I don’t think your uncle will have any problem with you maybe getting that rifle over there along with those magazines and that can of ammo.” I pointed to places all over the room that I didn’t dare enter. When we went out to the driveway, BT was behind the wheel of a brand new Dodge Ram.

  “Just because he thinks you’re an irresponsible, immature, capricious, thoughtless, harebrained individual doesn’t mean he feels the same way about me.”

  “Feel better now?” I asked him.

  He nodded. “I’d beep the horn if I didn’t think the zombies would come.”

  Mad Jack’s head popped up from the other side of the truck. “Magnets!” he said excitedly.

  “Okay? Should I be happy about that?”

  “Oh very much so. I’m sticking the boxes all around the truck.”

  “Could you maybe not put it there?” I asked as he stuc
k in on the little door that covered the gas cap.

  “Oh that would probably be a good idea.”

  “How can you be so smart and so oblivious?”

  He didn’t seem too happy with my observation.

  Tommy had two large duffel bags, one of which was suspiciously moving. At first, I thought it might be Henry, then I saw smoke leaking through the heavy material.

  Tommy shrugged. “He said he couldn’t be seen entering the truck.”

  “So you carried him in a duffel bag? Now you’re just being an enabler.” I told him.

  Tommy shrugged again. He did, however, toss both bags up into the bed of the truck like he was a disgruntled airline employee.

  “Hey, man. I dropped my jay!” came muffled through the bag, then there was a harsh coughing scream. “I’m burning, man! I’m burning, man!” Then a pause. “Wait … am I at Burning Man or am I a man burning? That’s deep!”

  “I can’t take this.” I strode over and unzipped the bag. I backed away, quickly fanning clean air to my nose. “Nope, you’re definitely burning. So that’s what old patchouli smells like when it cooks. Damn.”

  “This is my best shirt!” Trip sat up and was quickly patting down the front of his Hawaiian print shirt that looked like it had been made before the small island chain became the fiftieth state.

  “Why is he here!?” BT roared, stepping out of the truck.

  “He’s why I couldn’t be seen,” Trip said in hushed tones.

  Now I got it.

  “He’s just going to screw everything up!”

  “It’ll be all right. He knows what he’s doing. You ride up in the front, Trav, with BT. Me, Tommy, and Trip will hang out in the back.”

  “You sure?”

  “Yeah, we’re fine. We got the boxes. Oh hey, MJ, what’s the battery life on these things?”

  “If they don’t burn, about an hour. Considerably less if they do.”

  “Great. Where’s the on off switch.”

  “Switch?”

  “Fuck. BT we have to roll while we can.”

 

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