Barbara Stern sits on the floor behind the dusty shelving units at the northeast corner of the litter-strewn stationhouse, bracing herself on the shelf legs as though waiting out a tornado. The kids sit on each of her flanks, trying to concentrate on their coloring books and sketch pads and Little Golden Books like The Poky Little Puppy and The Little Red Hen while the world is turned upside down outside their boarded windows.
Every time a burst of gunfire crackles in the distance, or a sonic boom from a shotgun lights up the sky, or a cluster of walkers brushes up against the wood-frame outer walls, the older kids twitch and flinch, while the younger ones whimper under their breaths as though they’ve been kicked in the gut. Barbara keeps whispering for them to relax, it’s going to be okay, they have a good plan and Lilly and Bob know what they’re doing, but her nerves are as raw and exposed as those of the children. She grips those shelf legs with white-knuckle pressure at the boom of each salvo, holding on so tightly that the molded steel has begun to make bloody indentations on her palms.
She keeps thinking she can identify the make and model of each gun as she hears its blast, and that she doesn’t hear the blat of David’s Tec-9, and this is driving her crazy. The machine pistol that they found a few weeks ago in the storage rooms of the Meriwether County National Guard Depot has a distinctive sound: a sort of shrill metallic rattle, like a baby howitzer. She hasn’t heard that noise for many minutes, and her brain keeps going to the worst-case scenario, flashing on images of David lying bullet-riddled and torn apart by walkers, and this makes her grip the shelf legs even tighter.
In fact, she’s trying to drive these very images from her brain when she hears a noise coming from across the room that sets her teeth on edge and makes her flesh rash with goose bumps.
“Don’t move!” she hisses at the children, pulling herself up and switching off the safety on her .44 Bulldog. The gun is extremely heavy for a snub-nosed revolver, and it seems to have gotten heavier over the last few hours. In addition, the trigger action is stiff, hard to pull. But at the moment, Barbara feels as though she could crack the grip in half with her bare hand.
The noise of someone trying to force the knob on the side door rattles again across the room, and Barbara assumes the shooting position as she approaches, gun in both hands, finger on the trigger pad, shoulders squared while she blows a long tendril of gray hair from her face. She makes sure to hold her zaftig body at an angle to the door so her right shoulder will absorb much of the recoil from the massive handgun.
She reaches the door, and puts her ear against the wooden frame, holding the Bulldog’s muzzle up at the ceiling. She hears a frantic shuffling, someone huffing and puffing.
She’s about to call out when the door suddenly explodes inward, bursting open with the force of a battering ram. The jamb smacks Barbara straight on, knocking her senseless, driving her backward, and sending her to floor. She lands on her ass, the Bulldog spinning off across the parquet tile. Her vision wavers, her ears ringing as she tries to crawl toward the gun.
* * *
At the corner of Dogwood and Jones Mill, in a curtain of cordite, smoke, dust, and death-stench as thick as gauze, Miles Littleton goes through an entire ten-round magazine, momentarily keeping the leading edge of the walker horde at bay while David and Norma attempt to drag Harold Staubach out of harm’s way. Harold is having none of it.
“Forget it!” Lying on his side, sucking in raspy breaths, he pushes them away, kicking feebly, his shoulder in shreds, the front of his tunic a deep crimson red, drenched in arterial blood, which soaks the pavement. “Just go—GO!” He flinches as another walker drops to the cobblestones mere inches away from his right foot, half its head blown asunder by the dumdums from David’s Glock.
“Shut up!—Shut the fuck up!—We’re not leaving you and that’s all there is to it!” David barks his words at him, refusing to let go, dragging the older man another ten feet or so toward the barricade. Norma tries to take Harold’s feet and lift him up, but Harold kicks her off with his last drops of energy.
“Y’all are gonna get yourselves killed!” Harold screams at them, his voice breaking, his strength draining away. He tries to push David Stern off him. David’s hands are slimy with blood, and Harold slips from his grasp. Collapsing back to the pavement, Harold lets out a gasp, his beautiful singing voice finally starting to crumble. “I’m done for—I’m gone—You’ve gotta get yourselves inside!”
Miles fires another burst into the column of biters pressing toward them. More and more of the creatures—drawn to the noise and commotion—surround them, closing in like a fist. In a few seconds it will be too late—their ammunition is dwindling to nothing. A few more bursts from the AK and that will be it.
The young car thief fires a short salvo, hitting the three closest walkers.
One of the putrid heads explodes in a cloud of black fluids, and another snaps back so far it almost rips free. The owner of the third head keeps coming, the blast only grazing its temple. “TOO MANY OF ’EM!” Miles screams. He is trying to fire another controlled burst, but now the gun only clicks impotently. “FUCK!—SHIT!—SHIT!!”
The walkers engulf them. Miles pulls a machete from a sheath on his leg, Norma grabs a garden spade strapped to her pack, and David is grunting and huffing as he drags Harold farther and farther away from the throngs. Harold wavers in and out of consciousness as more of the creatures press in from the west, cutting off their escape route. The persistent din of guttural growling rises up all around them now, as loud as a jet engine, the stench unbearable, the hooked fingers of outstretched arms clawing at the air. Harold finally passes out, and David shakes him, feeling for a pulse.
Miles and Norma put up a valiant last-ditch effort to fight the creatures off, flailing madly at them, lashing out at one dead pasty face after another, striking some in the eye socket, others in the forehead, still others up through the mandible, but it’s futile. There are far too many of them now—so many that David’s view of the barricade is cut off, blocked by the mob. He lets out a howl of rage. Harold is dead weight now. David collapses next to the older man, heaving pained breaths.
Norma trips over them and falls to the paving stones. Miles flails and flails, until he stumbles over his own feet and sprawls to the pavers next to the others. And in that horrible moment of anguish—that single frozen instant before they are engulfed and devoured—David shares a feverish glance with the others. It’s as though they all realize the same thing at precisely the same moment: They are all going to die, and worse than that, they are going to die at the ravenous hands of the dead, torn apart, eviscerated, though they’re a stone’s throw of safety.
Only so much can be communicated in a single look—especially in a moment of suspended time such as this—but somehow, David Stern manages to gaze so deeply into Norma Sutters’ sweaty, maternal, old-soul face right at that moment that he sees his last fleeting thought returned from her in a wordless response: At least we’ll go down together, as one—here in this desolate situation; we’ll perish in each other’s arms. Norma nods at David, and then puts her plump arms around him.
David looks away from the fish-belly faces and shoe-button eyes as the creatures descend en masse upon them, and he has just closed his eyes and clasped onto the matronly Norma Sutters when he suddenly hears a noise that rises above the jet-engine rasp of the dead. And the noise is such a welcome surprise, David Stern silently begins to cry.
* * *
At first it sounds like a teakettle on the boil, a thin, shrill whistle. But when it swells into a shriek. David realizes the whistle is the sound of a young boy screaming. This is followed by the roar of a diesel engine, which farts a plume of black, acrid smoke into the air behind the adjacent barricade. David’s heart leaps, his breath seizing up in the back of his throat.
A thunderous explosion shatters the morning air, piercing the droning chorus of growls, and David Stern recoils with a start as the makeshift barrier of wooden siding and drywall fifty feet away suddenly collapses, the boards slamming down to the ground with a resounding series of thuds, and in a storm cloud of dust a gargantuan contraption emerges from behind the fallen barricade.
David recognizes the massive front blades of the International Harvester combine.
The kid is early—God bless his little snot-nosed soul—the kid never could keep track of time—that beautiful, perfect little man!
Like a tidal wave of gleaming metal, the thirty-foot-wide mouth—filled with rows of razor-sharp blades—churns toward the swarm, kicking up waves of debris and particles of prairie grass. A stream of detritus pours out the top of the vent stack as the enormous machine chugs and whirs toward the closest moving corpses.
Up in the high cab, encased in glass like a tiny emperor, Tommy Dupree sits at the controls. The kid learned to operate the showroom-new harvester by reading the owner’s manual, and the jerky way he’s steering the thing reveals how green his skills are. But the livid, furrowed face behind the tinted glass of the pilot cubicle also shows his determination, which triggers another thought in the back of David Stern’s traumatized mind.
Thank God for plan B.
* * *
On the floor, dazed and breathless from the pain shooting down her spine, Barbara Stern can see only blurry impressions of the huge man who has lunged into the stationhouse after kicking the door open. Tall, middle-aged, dressed in an ashy black funereal suit coat, bald as a billiard ball, face all broken out, blotchy, and livid, eyes crazy, he slams the door shut, then registers the fact that his entrance has knocked a sixty-something woman dressed in a floral-print muumuu over onto her fulsome ass. He’s still hyperventilating from the terror and fatigue of sprinting across 150 yards of walker-infested real estate as he scans the dusty, cluttered stationhouse. The thud of a dozen biters hitting the door outside vibrates the air.
“Whoa, Nelly!” He lets out a deep, husky exclamation when he sees Barbara crawling toward her gun. He leaps across the room and reaches her at the precise moment she gets her hand around the Bulldog. “Hold on there, sis!”
He kicks the gun out of her sweaty grasp, the Bulldog spinning in the other direction.
Barbara Stern tries to roll away. The Slocum twins squeal in horrified unison as the preacher kicks the woman hard in the kidney with his big Wellington. Barbara gasps and rolls across the floor and tries to see where her gun went. Her vision blurs. Her nose gushes from the impact of the door, and she may or may not have bit her tongue, her mouth filling with the coppery warmth of blood as she tries to crawl toward the Bulldog. She senses the huge presence of the intruder looming over her.
“Calm down!” his voice booms, a deep, smoky, stentorian instrument trained in the sacristies and revival tents of charismatic religions. His face shines with exertion. He slams a boot down on Barbara Stern’s dress. “It ain’t like I’m gonna eat ya!”
“Okay!” Barbara breathlessly surrenders, flopping onto her side, bleeding profusely down the front of her muumuu. Her chin drips, the bridge of her nose throbbing, an occasional sharp stab behind her eyes. She blinks and holds up her trembling hands. “Okay…”
“Here.” He digs in his breast pocket and pulls out a handkerchief. In the momentary lull, Barbara can hear the sound of the herd outside, an enormous, rusty, spinning turbine, surrounding the stationhouse; and she can hear something else, something in the distance, mingling with the din, vibrating the air, a low grinding noise that’s as deep and raspy as the largest pipe on a church organ. Jeremiah throws the hankie and it lands on Barbara’s legs. Then he goes over to the Bulldog, picks it up, checks the cylinder, and thrusts it down the back of his belt.
“Do whatever you need to do to me,” Barbara murmurs, picking up the cloth and pressing it down on her nose. Her voice muted now by the fabric of the cloth and her congested airways, she says thickly, “But I’m asking you, please, I’m begging you, as a man of God, as a Christian, don’t mess with these children. Don’t hurt them. They have nothing to do with this.”
He shoots a glance over at the cluster of kids hunkered and cowering behind the shelves. They look like scared animals in a cage. A soft continuous whimpering comes from the younger ones. The preacher smiles. He speaks without taking his eyes off the little ones. “Sorry to disagree with ya, sis, but they got everything to do with this.”
He ambles over to the shelving unit, shoves it aside as though it were made of balsa wood, and gives the kids the once-over with gleaming eyes. The whimpering intensifies. The preacher’s simian gaze settles on Bethany Dupree.
She appears to be the only child who isn’t either hiding behind a sibling, crying, or gazing meekly down at the floor. She stands her ground, her hands on her hips as though she disapproves of the whole concept of this man. She meets his gaze with a withering sort of contempt.
The preacher grins. His face twitches. “You’re a pistol, ain’t ya?”
“Leave us alone,” she says.
“You’ll do nicely.” He grabs her by the arm and pulls her out of hiding.
By this point, Barbara has managed to crawl across the floor, and now she struggles to her feet. The dizziness makes her head spin. She still can’t see very well. She wavers slightly as she stands there holding the blood-soaked hankie to her nose, watching the preacher pull the little girl across the room toward the boarded window. “Don’t do this, Jeremiah,” Barbara says.
The preacher turns and faces the older woman in the blood-spattered muumuu. He draws his Glock and casually presses the barrel against the side of Bethany Dupree’s head. All the fight goes out of the little girl’s face. Her eyes moisten, and she swallows a big gulp of air, and her lips curl downward as she tries her hardest not to cry. The preacher’s voice is flat and cold. “The wheels are already in motion, sis, there’s nothing any of us can do. This here’s the Rapture. We all been left behind, and now we’re all just playing what ya might call a big old board game.” The girl wriggles in his grasp, and Jeremiah tightens his grip on her collar, pressing the muzzle harder against her little pigtail. “The rivers are running red, sis.” Jeremiah burns his gaze into Barbara. “Birds falling out of the sky, and the living wants me dead. This here tot, she’s my little insurance policy.”
Without any warning, a small child darts out from behind the shelf. Barbara whirls to see Lucas Dupree, his little five-year-old face furrowed with rage, his tiny fists clenched white-knuckle tight, racing toward the preacher screaming, “LET HER BE!”
Barbara drops the bloody cloth and deftly lunges toward the boy, snatching him up before he can cross the room, lifting him off his feet. The boy’s feet continue to run in place in the air in a cartoonish pantomime. He’s already beginning to sob as Barbara hugs him to her bosom and strokes the back of his hair. “Okay, bruiser, that’s far enough, she’s gonna be fine. It’s okay. Easy now.” Barbara caresses the boy’s head and speaks softly but never takes her eyes off the preacher. “This man is not going to hurt your sister, he’s just going to borrow her for a second.” Barbara’s eyes narrow almost to slits, fixing themselves on the preacher. “And if anything happens to her, even if a single hair on her head is mussed, the people who survive here today, whoever they may be, they’re going to dedicate the remainder of their lives, however long that might be, to finding this man, this minister, this man of God, and making him sorry that he was ever born. Do you understand?”
Two individuals have listened closely to this soliloquy: the boy with his head buried in Barbara’s chest, nodding slightly, and the preacher, who has gone very still through all this, regarding the woman with a strange mixture of malice and admiration. At last, with the gun still pressed to the little girl’s head, he gives the woman a respectful nod. “Message received, sis. I think we could have very well done business together in another life.” He drags the little girl to the door. She keeps her tears tamped down. The preacher gives Barbara one last glimpse over his shoulder. “Keep your powder dry, sis.”
Then he turns, grasps the doorknob, and opens the door a few centimeters.
He peers out and sees an opening. The biters have drifted away from the door.
He pulls Bethany out into the pale light of day and makes an awkward run for it.