Chapter 1
“Do you think it’s one of them?”
“I
dunno. Has it moved?”
“Not
for the last ten minutes.”
“How
do you think it got here?”
“Dunno. Was it here before?”
“Don’t
remember seeing it, but the wind last night might have blown the leaves off
it.”
“Throw
something at it.”
“You do it.”
My
friend Trey and I were looking at a body.
It was a middle aged man, about forty five, although my only reference
to middle aged men was Mr. Greyson over the ridge. It looked about as old as him, and about the same color, so
maybe it was all right. It was
lying on its side under a bush, with it’s arms crossed on its chest, and its
head was turned away from us.
“Should
we go around it, look at it from the front?” Trey asked.
“Well,
we have to, if we want to get home.” I said. We’d been hunting for the better part of the morning,
checking our snares and having a fair amount of luck. We had three rabbits
apiece, and I had an extra squirrel I managed to knock out of a tree with a
well-thrown rock. We had seen the
tracks of a deer, but we had nothing on us that would take down a large
animal. We had our packs and our
knives, but that was it.
We
walked carefully through the brush, trying to keep to the game trail that ran a
zig-zag pattern through the
woods. Behind our houses was a
decent sized forest, and we had both grown up exploring and hunting it’s
depths. There wasn’t much to the
forest we hadn’t seen, so to come across this body suddenly was having to admit
it wasn’t there before. And in
that case, there was a really good chance it was one of them.
We
slowly walked around the man, trying to see it’s face before it saw us. If it was one of them, it would have
dark splotches all over its face.
If it wasn’t, it would look normal. That was the easiest way to tell, although not all of them
had the splotches. Some were
normal-looking, and you couldn’t tell they were a problem until they tried to
get you.
Trey
bumped my arm. I looked over at
him and he pointed to the body once,
then pointed to his own eyes.
He shook his head and I took him at his word. I couldn’t see the face at the angle I was at, being taller
than he was, but Trey was telling me he didn’t think it was one. We’d seen them before, and we knew what
they could do, so we were naturally cautious about approaching one. We’d also seen plenty of dead bodies as
well, so if this was another one of those, no big deal.
We
worked our way across the path, and moved away from the body. I’d tell my dad about it and he would
probably come out and drag it over to the burn hole. It was a deep pit, about fifty feet across, and was
originally thirty feet deep. It
had started out as a retention pit for the floods we would get, but it served
another purpose in the end.
“Hey,
Josh?” Trey said as we followed
the trail again.
Whatever
I was thinking of answering flew out of my head as the bushes the body was
under suddenly exploded. The
corpse, which it was now obvious it wasn’t, thrashed and torn at the clinging
shrub as it tried to free itself.
Trey
and I took one look at the monster coming after us and we didn’t have to think
twice. We turned and ran for our
lives.
Behind
us, the infected person tore free of the foliage and came after us in the
typical fast walk of someone who had fallen prey to the disease that had killed
so many. It seemed they couldn’t
quite work out the mechanics of running, but walking fast was the next best
thing. Of course, when you were
twelve years old like Trey and I were, a fast walking adult was almost on par
with as fast as we could run.
“Go,
go, go!” I yelled, pushing Trey on.
He was the slower of the two of us, and the most likely to trip on
something. If he was behind me he
wouldn’t have made it. I could
hear the man stumbling, wheezing, and trying like crazy to get at us. If we fell, or stopped, he’d tear us
apart.
“Where
can we go?” Trey yelled, running past a small stand of trees. That was a landmark for us, and told us
we were close to our homes.
“Head
down the hill, we’ll get him with the rocks!” I panted, stealing alook behind me and wishing immediately
I hadn’t. The man was moving fast,
and his walk was pretty steady, which on these people meant he had been
infected fairly recently, and his mind still remembered how to move. Thank God he had forgotten how to run.
“Are
you nuts?” Trey wheezed, turning left anyway. “We’ll get in trouble for sure!”
“Gotta
risk it, unless you want to run forever.” I said, moving down the hill. The forest we emerged from led out onto
a huge man-made hill, which extended for a quarter mile in front of us. The top was flat and grassy, and the
sides were steep enough to give even a healthy person a case of the heaves. Going up was hard enough, but going
down was a piece of cake. We just
let gravity take over and slid down the grass until we reached the rocks at the
bottom.
The
rocks were huge, the smallest of them being larger than my fist. The larger ones we couldn’t even move
if we tried together. But we
didn’t need those, we just needed ones that were about the size of a
pumpkin. Trey and I each picked up
a rock the size of a baseball and lay in wait for the diseased man to come
tumbling down.
We
heard him before we saw him. Those
infected with the Tripp Virus wheezed a lot, since they were missing a lot of
their lung tissue and their throats were messed up. It wasn’t too bad in the daylight, but at night it creeped
me out.
In
a minute, the man walked of the edge of the hill, and fell right onto his
face. He slid that way for a
while, and wound up crashing head first into the same rock pile we did. Blood poured out of a deep gash on his
cheek, and the impact stunned him just enough for us to move.
“Get
him!” I yelled at Trey, heaving my rock up and dumping it on the prone man’s
shoulders. The man wheezed
suddenly and tried to turn his head, but it was wedged in between two rocks and
not going anywhere.
Trey
tossed his rock onto the man’s back, and then jumped on top of the rocks,
adding his weight to the stones.
The combined heaviness was too much for the infected man, and he
couldn’t do anything but lay there and bleed.
Trey
looked over at me. “You gotta kill
him, man!”
I
looked down at the pathetic creature with a mixture of loathing, disgust, and
fear. I had seen these things
since the day I was born, and I never got used to them. But that didn’t stop me from doing what
needed to be done, and I picked up the biggest rock I could lift. Pushing it over my head, I brought it
down with both hands onto the head of the infected man. The rock cracked into
the man’s skull, stunning him, and I lifted the rock again, bringing it down
again. This time there was a
serious crack as the rock broke the skull and penetrated the brain. The man’s thrashing ceased, and lay
there as blood leaked out of his head and into the rocks around him.
Trey
climbed off and we looked down at the dead man.
“That
was close, man.” Trey said.
I
nodded. “Yeah, but we got this.” I said with bravado I didn’t feel.
“Let’s
get home.” Trey said.
“Better
get our rabbits back.” I said, starting to climb up the hill. We had pitched our catch when the Tripp
victim started chasing us.
“Ugh.” Trey said. “I hate backtracking.
Stupid Tripper.”
We
called them Trippers, after the virus came. According to my dad, it was a little thing that suddenly
became a big problem. It started
with the street junkies, the homeless, and the runaways. No one really paid any attention to the
spread because it was out of sight.
The way things worked, if it wasn’t seen it wasn’t a problem. But according to the rumors, the virus
came in with a load of marijuana.
It was ingested, and from there it took off in its new host. It attacked the neural pathways in the
brain, causing the victim to forget everything about themselves, turning them
into mindless husks. After that,
it went to work on the nervous system itself, eating away at the pain
receptors. People with the virus
could lose a limb and not feel a thing.
Finally, the virus slowed down the body systems, with the heart beating
only ten or twelve times a minute.
But they could still move nearly as quickly as they could before they
caught the disease. The weird
thing was they seemed to just keep going, even after they should have died from
starvation, exposure, or dehydration.
The
virus transferred from host to host through bodily fluids, and could live for
seventy-two hours in open air.
That was how it spread. The
virus turned the victims into mindless animals, attacking anything they saw as
a threat. My dad explained that as
we learned later, they were territorial, which was why they attacked everyone
they saw on their turf. Trippers,
being mindless, didn’t stay in one place but wandered about. They didn’t attack each other, and my
dad said it was because they didn’t see other infected as threats. They lived
in a constant state of high alert, ready to fly at anything.
I
didn’t see any of this, because on the day I was born, I saved my dad’s
life. My father was a policeman,
and just as my mom went into labor, his station was called up to help put down
an outbreak of Trippers. Every
single officer who answered the call that day died. My dad called me his luck, and I suppose for that one day I
was.
Dad
took us home the next day, and three days later the hospital we had been in was
overrun. There were too many
Trippers out there to deal with, and the police couldn’t handle them all. Eventually things just fell apart, and
we’d been on our own ever since.
We
managed better than most, at first, and it was probably my dad that returned
the favor by saving us all during the really bad times. Once the Trippers took over, and the
police were gone, people started banding together for survival. Problem was, desperate people put in a
desperate situations with death right around the corner tended to tear
themselves apart from within. My
dad told me stories about finding several groups of people all lying dead in a
bunch, and it looked like they had just simply killed each other.
We
probably also survived because we lived pretty far away from main population
centers. We had a house on the far
end of a small town, with a forest in the backyard and a creek nearby. It was all I had ever known.
Trey
lived across the street, and the creek that wound its way around the area went
directly through his back yard.
Water was never a problem for his family. Trey’s mom used to be a schoolteacher and for lack of
anything else to do, she took it upon herself to educate Trey and myself. Since she didn’t have to follow any
curriculum, we probably got a better education than we could have in the normal
world. Trey’s dad was a
pipefitter, and before the end of civilization he had owned a small but
successful business. These days,
he occupied himself with figuring out how to bring more water to larger areas
of growing vegetables and fruits.
I
threw a wave to Trey as he headed off around the front of my house and took of
for his own. I hung the rabbits
from a small branch, taking care they didn’t reach low enough for a scavenger to
get them. I felt like I earned the
jumpers today.
“Mom! I’m home!” I yelled as I entered into
the garage through the side door.
I took off my gear, putting everything in it’s proper place. Dad taught me that trick. If I ever had to leave in a hurry, and
if it was dark or light, I always knew where my stuff was and could get it
without delay. Dad taught me a lot
of tricks. Some Mom knew about,
some she was better off not knowing.
“How
was the snare line?” Mom asked,
like she always did. I never knew
if Mom actually cared about it, or was just being polite. She didn’t go outside much, and usually
went to bed right after dark. Dad
said she took the end of the world pretty hard, but I couldn’t see the big
deal.
“It
was good, I got three decent rabbits.” I said , washing my hands in the
sink.
“Good
for you.” Mom said absently. “Are you going to clean them, or let your father
do it again?”
I
ducked a little. “I’ll go do it right now.” I said, moving to the door.
“Josh…?”
Mom called out as I stepped into the garage.
“Yeah?”
“We
can spare one of the rabbits for the Simpsons. I heard Lucy’s mom isn’t feeling well, and they haven’t had
much luck with their traps.” Mom
said.
“All
right.” I said, closing the door.
Under my breath I added, “That’s because they can’t bait worth a damn,
and their traps are too big anyway.
This ain’t Africa.”
I
spent the next hour cleaning and washing the rabbits. I didn’t bring up the Tripper to my mom, since she would
have freaked out, and I don’t need that today. I was a little shaky, the more I thought about it, since I
had never actually killed a Tripper before. I had seen my dad do it a hundred times, and there was that
big attack where I loaded guns for my dad while the Trippers attacked the
house, but I hadn’t ever had to do it myself.
I
didn’t know what to feel about it.
On the one hand, I felt glad I was alive. On the other hand, I had killed someone. I guess it would be different if I had
to kill someone I knew, but I don’t know.
I guess it was just him or me, and I made it him.
I
finished with the rabbits just in time to see my dad come back from his
rounds. When everything went
south, as he called it, he knew people would tear each other apart unless there
was some kind of order being kept.
So my dad, being a police officer, decided to keep his badge on and
handle the normal, everyday problems that came up from people trying to
survive. He didn’t call himself a
police officer anymore, he just called himself the Law. He wore his badge and gun, and went
around the homesteads checking on people, making sure things were okay, dealing
with Trippers if they showed up, and generally keeping the peace. He told me at first he was a little
freaked by the responsibility, since he was essentially judge, jury, and
executioner, but people seemed to realize it was necessary and was glad someone
was willing to step up and do it.
I
walked into the house the same time my dad did, after he put up and took care
of his ride.
“Hey,
pal! How’s things?” My dad asked
me as he gave my mother a kiss.
Mom’s worried faced looked calmer now, like the stress of being alone
was gone now that Dad was home.
“I
caught three rabbits today, they’re in the tank right now. Mom wants me to take one over to the
Simpsons later.” I said, looking
up at my dad. He was a big man,
broad shouldered and strong. I
must have sounded different because my dad looked at me sideways and squinted
slightly.
“Good
for you! Let’s go take a look at them and see which one we want to send to the Simpson’s.” My dad took me by the shoulder and led
me into the garage where we kept the water tank for the cleaned kills.
We
closed the door behind us and walked over to the tank. It was a small stock tank my dad picked
up from somewhere, and we used it for cleaning game and keeping the flies off
our kills.
I
pulled out the jumpers and dad’s mouth turned down as he nodded and looked
appraisingly at the rabbits.
“We
can give them that middle one there, that should keep them for a day.” Dad said. As I put the rabbits back, Dad asked the question I worried
about since this morning.
“Anything
you need to tell me?” Dad asked,
putting a hand on my shoulder. I
was tall for my age, and developing broad shoulders myself, but at the moment I
felt like a three year old who just got caught stealing the cookies.
I
looked down. “Trey and I killed a
Tripper today.”
My
dad took me by both shoulders and looked me in the eyes. He was as serious as I had ever seen
him.
“Take
me there, now.” He said
quietly. He went over to the small
locker we had by the door and pulled out a rifle. It was a simple .22 rifle, but it was all we needed right
now. Dad had trained me on it and I knew how to use it, but I wasn’t supposed
to take it out unless there was an emergency. Trippers were attracted to loud noises, and gunshots seemed
to make them angry. Or angrier. That was a lesson that wasn’t learned early enough. Dad said all the gunshots from people
and cops trying to defend themselves just made the situation worse. Crazed Trippers were not a nice thing
to see.
Dad
poked his head into the house to tell mom we were going to check on something
and we would be back in a few minutes.
Just to keep her from worrying, Dad told me to string my bow and take it
with me. I slipped the string on
quickly, and threw my quiver onto my back. I loved my bow, and according to my dad, I was pretty good
with it. I made my own arrows, and
practiced whenever I could. I
didn’t take it with too often to hunt because it tended to get in the way. The only time I took it hunting was
when I was looking for big game like deer.
We
walked across the side yard and up the steps that took us to the top of our
fence. It was a tall wooden fence
that Dad had reinforced with rocks over the years. It could keep out a horde of
crazed trippers and twice it had.
“Where
did it come from?” Dad asked as we jumped down off the fence.
“Don’t
know.” I said adjusting my quiver which had shifted in the jump. “Trey and I
saw a body laying under a bush, and we looked close, trying to see if it was a
Tripper or if it was just someone who was sleeping. It chased us out of the woods.”
“Did
you have your bow with you?” Dad asked.
“No,
just my knife. The guy was pretty big.”
I said.
“All
right. What then?”
“Well,
Trey and I slid down the north side, and waited by the big rocks, near the
creek. The guy fell down the steep
hill, but we jumped him when fell. “ I said.
“What
do you mean?” Dad asked sternly.
“You didn’t touch him yourself, did you?”
“No,
Dad. Sheesh. We threw big rocks on
him to keep him down, and then I crushed his skull with another rock. Trey
stood on him, too. He couldn’t
move.” I was kind of defensive about the situation, since I thought I had done
pretty good.
My
father thought about that one for a bit.
He didn’t say anything for a while, then he burst out laughing.
“That’s
great!” He clapped me on the back as he beamed with pride. “That took guts and brains, and I
couldn’t have done better myself!”
He laughed again.
I
felt a lot better, and actually looked forward to seeing my handiwork again.
We
slipped down the small ditch, and crossed the small two-lane road that ran
behind our house. It had been a
long time since a car was on that road, and it was broken up and cracked all
over. Dad said that there were
roads all over the place, and you once could go anywhere in the country just by
getting in your car. Our car was
up on blocks, with the tires off.
Dad said it wasn’t going anywhere, anyway.
Crossing
the street, Dad stopped and turned his head into the wind. He closed his eyes and listened, and I
knew enough to keep quiet when he did this. He told me he was using his radar, and I figured it had to
be true, since we never got into trouble when he did this.
Crossing
the road, we slipped through the brush and worked our way over to the
rocks. There wasn’t a lot of
animal activity right now, and I was slightly curious as to why. We had been here so many times it was
funny how the locals had adapted to us.
Getting
to the rocky areas was pretty easy once we worked our way through the
brush. The path I used on a
regular basis was easy for me, but dad had a time because he had to get down to
my height to clear the branches and brambles.
“Where
is he?” Dad asked, looking around.
“Never mind, I see him.”
Dad went over to where the body still lay, looking over the kill area,
and looking up towards the top of the hill. He stepped halfway up the slope and looked down at the body
from a higher angle.
For
my part, I couldn’t figure out what the heck he was doing. The body was right down here, right in
front of me. It sure wasn’t going
anywhere and it sure wasn’t going to tell us where it came from. I had nothing
to do but warm myself in the sun and watch the lazy water of the creek flow
under the bridge and trickle out of sight around a bend.
After
a minute I got bored, so I used the time to practice drawing an arrow from my
quiver and nocking it. I tried to do it faster and faster, and finally quit
when I lost my grip on the arrow and threw it ten yards away.
“Damn.”
I said as I made my way over to where I thought the arrow had gone.
“What
did you say?” Dad called. He was
down by the body, looking at the rocks and pulling the man over to see his
face. From my angle he didn’t get
better looking in direct sunlight.
“Nothing.
“ I said quickly. Dad didn’t
swear, so I ended up learning the fundamentals from Trey. Dad always said we
are judged by our words and deeds, so if you may have blown it on one, you
could always try to build up the other.
I figured I could curse as long as I did something heroic once in a
while.
I
reached the spot where I thought I saw my arrow land and looked carefully for
the fletching. I didn’t see it
right away, and knelt down for another look. I swept my hand through the grass, and thought I felt the
shaft but was disappointed when it turned out to be a weed.
Another
sweep gave me a possibility, and I felt the stick up to the end, where it
flared outward in plastic fletching. I was just about to stand up and shout my
find when I saw it.
Up
the road, just across the bridge, was a tripper. It was an older one, with deep red splotches on his
face. His clothes were tattered,
like he had been outside for a long time. One foot dragged along the other, but
that was a fooler. When the rage hit, they moved fast no matter how bad they
were injured. There were some deep looking claw marks on his face, and dried
blood crusted his neck and shoulder.
I
didn’t want to shout but I had to warn my dad somehow. I looked back and instead of seeing my
father, I saw nothing at all. He was nowhere to be seen.
I
didn’t know what to do. I had my
bow, but I’d never shot at a tripper before. If I missed, he would be on me in seconds. I needed to be able to shoot again
quickly, but I didn’t know how. I
was shaking as I watched the tripper move closer and closer.
As
I sat there in the brush, I realized I was concealed, and the tripper would
walk on by. Maybe I could get him
from behind, which would buy me some seconds if I missed of didn’t get a kill
shot on the first try. I didn’t have any options, I just hoped my dad wouldn’t
come strolling over the hill, whistling like he normally does, and get that
tripper all riled up.
It was dead silent as the infected
man slowly trudged past. I could
see more details, and there was a deep, black bite mark on his left arm. If I had to guess, that was where he
originally got bit. Once you were
bit, it was over for you in a matter of hours. There was no cure, and there was no vaccine. At least, we never heard of any. Dad said it was a mercy to put these
poor creatures down, since they were living in hell, anyway. Their minds gone, their memories gone,
their bodies altered and twisted.
I wondered sometimes if they attacked the living in the hopes of getting
killed, that they could end their suffering with a bullet to the head.
I pushed all that out of my head as
I slowly made my way through the brush and grass. Years of stalking small game since the time I could walk had
made me a very stealthy hunter, and I saw the tripper as my prey now. That was the only way I could do what
needed to be done without falling down in fear. Besides, my dad was probably watching, waiting for me to
make a move, since his rifle would call any more trippers to the area.
It wasn’t easy crawling forward
with a loaded recurve bow in my hands, but when I reached the edge of the road,
I was glad I had it ready, since the tripper was a lot closer than I had
anticipated. I stood up on the
side of the road, still partially concealed by the tall grass that grew there.
Behind me was the bridge over the creek, and I could hear the water as it
tumbled past the dozens of rocks Trey and I had thrown in there over the
years. That sound probably had
helped mask my approach, and for that I was grateful. When I realized that I could have crawled out of the grass
at the feet of the tripper, I started to sweat again.
Pulling back my arrow, I held the
string for a second as I adjusted my aim.
The arrow trembled slightly, as the energy from the limbs prepared to
launch it forward. I adjusted for
the wind coming from the north, and let go.
I didn’t watch the arrow, I was
busy whipping out another and nocking it quickly, drawing the string back and
looking for a target to come running at me. I was a bit surprised to find no
target, so I eased the string forward, keeping my hand on the arrow. I stepped out of the grass and onto the
road.
The tripper lay face down in the
middle of the road, with his head turned to the side. Sticking out of the back of his head was my arrow. The point had gone in on the right side
of the back of his skull, and the field point had blown through the bone like
it wasn’t there. Creeping forward,
I could see the arrow tip had exited through the right eye, close to the
nose. The eye was turned in my
direction, almost as if it was asking me what the heck just happened.
I looked at the tripper for a long
time, not feeling anything. It was
like a switch had turned off when I hunted him. It wasn’t an infected person anymore, worthy of our fear and
pity. It was just something I had
to put down for my safety and my dad’s.
Just as I was about to pull the
arrow out, a voice called out of the brush.
“Leave it there.”
I jumped a mile and nearly fired an
arrow at the sound when my dad stepped out of the grass. He was holding his rifle and pointing
it at the tripper. Kneeling down,
he looked over the man from head to toe, taking careful note of the two foot
pointy stick poking in and out of the man’s head.
Dad looked a bit more, then scanned
the area where the tripper had come from.
Seeing no danger, he stood up and, grabbing a handful of pant leg,
dragged the dead man over to the side of the road.
As he worked, Dad spoke to me. “You’ll have to replace that arrow,
Josh. It’s full of virus now, and
you could get yourself infected.”
I understood that thinking, as we
usually washed and burned anything that had come in contact with a
tripper. I wasn’t happy having to
make another arrow, but I had done it before and would likely do it again. We didn’t get out much to scrounge up
any pre-made stuff, and when we did, we were usually looking for stuff for the
house. Dad was always wanting ammo
and canned stuff, mom was usually looking for some sort of material. I typically grabbed whatever was shiny.
After hauling the tripper away, Dad
went and hauled the other dead man out of the rocks. He wasn’t as pretty as the other guy, who was sporting a new
arrow through his head. This guy
was bloody and flat headed from where I had pounded his skull in. Dad just grabbed another handful of leg
and pulled it over the man’s head, yanking him out of the rocks. Blood and brains eased out of the wound
as the body was dragged through the gravel.
I was watching the proceedings with
interest, as I usually did with the things my Dad did. He never wasted movement, never did
anything that required him to clean up later. Everything was thought out, and he always had a plan.
Once the bodies were out of the
way, Dad piled a bunch of rocks on the men. It was as good as a burial as they
were ever going to get, since their families were probably long gone.
One thing bothered me and I must
have had a look on my face, since my Dad asked me the question I had in my
head.
“So why didn’t I shoot him?” My dad asked me.
“Yeah!” I said, probably too
loudly. “How come you let me waste
an arrow?” I was focusing on the fact I had to make more arrows now.
Dad smiled. “Don’t get me wrong , Josh, I would
have killed him had you been in any danger. But I wanted to see if you could get close without being
heard or seen, and I wanted to see if you would be able to take down a full
adult with your bow.”
Dad ruffled my hair a bit. “You passed on both counts. Now I know I don’t have to worry about
you when I’m away..”
I was mollified, but still a little
angry. I decided to change the
subject.
“Dad?”
“What, Josh?”
“Where did he come from?” I was
serious in my question. If these
two trippers were a sign of things to come, I didn’t want to run into them when
I ran my trap line.
Dad got a real serious look on his
face. “Don’t know or sure. I’m trying to figure that one out. If he came from the north, that’s to be
expected. But if he came from the
south or west, there could be some serious trouble ahead.”
“Why?”
“South means there’s trouble in
Manhattan and the outliers. West
means there’s trouble in Frankfort.” Dad said simply. “The guy you took down with your bow was old, likely two to
three years infected. The other
guy, the first one, he probably was more fresh, and that’s a worry to me.”
“What can we do?” I asked, not having a clue as to where
my dad was going with this.
“Well, I think the only thing to do
is to track his back as far as we can, and get a general direction as to where
he might have come from. After
that, we check our maps and head for the towns and homes that way.” Dad said.
I thought about that one. It was going to take a lot of work,
just for one tripper. “Maybe he
was just a roamer.” I said.
Roamers were just trippers that wandered the countryside, sometimes just
laying down for a while. They were
a nasty surprise when they jumped out of the grass at you. Dad nearly got killed when three of them
tried to jump him. Fortunately
Dad’s horse jumped away in time and he put enough space between himself and
them to get the killing shots off.
“Can’t know unless we look.” Dad said. “We’ll start off tomorrow morning.” Dad started to head
across the street to the opening that led to our property.
I suddenly got excited. “I can come with?”
Dad nodded, smiling. “Of course. You’re too good with your bow to leave behind. But you might want to make a few more
arrows.”
I walked lightly behind my Dad, my
steps barely touching the ground.
I had never been invited to a search before. I wondered if I should ask to bring Trey, but I decided
against it. I’d rather have Trey
jealous of me for a change.
Back at the house, Dad went into
the stable to take care of his horse.
With cars not working and electricity scare, we made do with what was
available. Dad didn’t mind. He said it allowed him to slow down and
make sure he didn’t miss anything.
Just as I passed the door, Dad
turned to me. “Don’t forget the
rabbit for the Simpsons.”
Crud. I’d hoped he had forgotten that little nugget. Oh, well. “On it. I’ll be
back later.” I said, hauling the rabbit out of the tank and dumping it in a
sack.
“Take your bow.” Dad said from
behind the horse. “Just in case.”
I didn’t know what my dad was
thinking, and he didn’t reveal his plans all that often, so when he did
something out of the ordinary, it tended to stick out. Something was at play, and I was very
curious as to what it might be.
But I knew dad wasn’t going to tell me, and mom sure as heck wasn’t.
“Already have it.” I said. I had a feeling this wasn’t going to be
a routine visit, and it wasn’t even supper time yet.
Crud.
I stepped out of our property and
walked along the road that connected the houses in this area. I thought it odd to have a collection
of homes out in the middle of nowhere, but Dad had pointed out that when
everyone had cars and gas, people drove all over the place. Living away from stores and towns was
perfectly normal back then.
I wouldn’t know. All I’ve ever known was this world,
where people walked or rode horses.
Some people rode bicycles, and Trey’s family had this bicycle car that
his dad had picked up somewhere.
As me, I was walking. I tied the sack to my belt so I could
have my hands free, but the down side of that was the wet rabbit got my right
pant leg wet from my knee down.
I passed several houses that were
empty, the creepiest being the one at the bottom of a hill just three houses
down from mine. Dad said when the
everything went bad, that family refused to join the other families in fighting
off the trippers and just shut themselves into their house. No one has ever seen them again. Trey said the dad went crazy and ate
everyone else in there, except for his little boy, who escaped by climbing into
the attic. Trey said the dad
spends his time walking around the house, following the noises of the
attic.
I didn’t believe him, but passing
by that small home tucked away in a wooded corner, I did wonder if some of the
rumors were true. I’d never seen a
light or movement in that house in the entire year my dad had finally let me
out on my own. As I walked by, I
stopped suddenly. Did a curtain
move? I looked carefully from the
road, but could not see any movement in any of the windows. Out of spite, I brought my bow up and
drew the string back, hearing the slight rasp as the arrow slid along the
shelf. I aimed at each window,
daring myself to fire, but after a time I slowly eased the bow back. I shook my head, calling myself all
sorts of names for my imagination.
I walked on, looking back once
more. My breath caught in my
throat, and I moved quickly away.
In the far right window, a small white hand was gently touching the
glass.
I turned right at the fork in the
road, and walked past several occupied homes. These people had survived the worst of the trippers and were
doing well on their own. They had
fenced their yards with timber taken from abandoned homes, and used their
neighbors’ land for additional grazing and planting. If you found yourself alone with five homes around you
empty, you could easily gain an additional acre or three with just a few
removals of fence between the yards.
That’s how we gained the land for our horse and our gardening.
At the end of the block, I stepped
up to a gate and peeked over the top.
I was at the Simpsons, a decent sized ranch house on a corner lot. They
worked pretty hard to keep their land up, but while they were good farmers,
they couldn’t keep up in the meat.
It was sad, really. They
had a decent bit of forest behind them, and a small creek as well. They could have dammed that creek and
had fish for the taking, and good snares would catch the small animals coming
to drink. Heck, even bigger game
might stroll down just for the asking.
I rang the little bell that hung on
a string by the gate. I knew
better than to just stroll up to a house unannounced. That would get me killed or seriously hurt. Dad said back in
the day a lot of people were killed by trippers coming up to the house and
people stepping out to meet them, thinking they were just other folks. You learned too late that you were
about to be wiped out.
“Who’s out there?” A small voice called out.
I recognized Lucy’s voice. Lucy Simpson was a girl about my age,
and she came over to my house three days a week for schooling. She was nice, but lately she had been
getting moody, and two days out the three she was mad at me or Trey for
something we said or did.
“It’s Josh, Lucy!” I called. “Got a rabbit for you if you want
it. I got lucky on the trap line
today. Mom said to bring it over
to see if you wanted it.”
“Leave it there.” Lucy said. “Mom’s not feeling well, and I don’t
want you to get sick.”
I winced. Sickness was a constant problem, and I tended to think more
people died from the flu each year than tripper attacks.
“Will do. Hope your mom feels better soon.” I said, hanging the sack
over the gate.
“Thanks. Tell your mom we said thanks.” Lucy said, closing the door.
I turned away, not answering, since
she wouldn’t have heard me anyway.
I guess I got lucky in that she didn’t hate me today.
I turned away and looking down the
road to the left, I could see several dark homes down a very dark road. The trees were thick, and their canopy
cast deep shadows over most of the area.
It nearly looked like a cave that I was standing at the entrance
to. I did a bit of mental
calculation, and I realized this road would take me behind Trey’s house, which
I could cross and get to my own house quicker than backtracking the way I had
come.
That sounded like a plan to me, so
I moved in that direction. The sun
was heading towards evening, and the adjusted sunlight lit up the entrance to
the ‘cave.’ I seriously doubted I
would have gone if it was darker, but right now it didn’t seem so bad. As I walked further, I chuckled to
myself, realizing I was barely a quarter mile from my house, and I could have
saved myself a walk if I had only realized this route earlier.
I passed a house on the left, and
it looked like it had been abandoned a long time ago. The drapes were falling down in one window, and an upper
window was broken. The front door
looked like it was slightly open, but I wasn’t planning on going in there. The house was dead, and likely everyone
who had ever lived there was dead, too.
On my right was another house, and
it looked in better shape, although I doubted anyone lived there. It aroused my curiosity, because it’s
backyard was directly across from the backyard of the little house in the
valley.
“You’re a fool, go home.” I told
myself as I walked up the driveway.
Common sense didn’t win the argument, and I told myself I was just
looking for information to give my dad. I looped my bow over my shoulder, and
put my arrow back in it’s quiver.
I walked up the driveway, and a
squirrel chattered at me from the oak tree in the front yard. The grass was hugely overgrown, and was
nearly as tall as myself. The
house was dark and silent, and I began to think I was the only visitor this
place had had in years. In the
back yard, the growth was about the same, although the rose bushes were
huge. A small swing set stood
lonely in the corner of the lot, and a plastic turtle graced the yard next to
the cracked and weathered porch.
I looked back at the house, and it
was as dark in the back as it was in the front. The house was simple, but nice, and the trees around the lot
meant that this place must have been nice and cool in the summer.
The back yard was fenced in, and I
was grateful for the chance to get close to the creepy house without being
observed. I didn’t have any real
reason to be doing what I was, and if I thought about it long enough, I might
come up with an explanation which might have found an excuse even for me.
At the edge of the yard, I looked
at the fence for a moment. It was
eight feet tall, and that was three feet higher than I was currently occupying. Hmm.
A quick glance around the yard
didn’t give me any inspiration, so I was about to leave when I noticed the
swing set was just a foot taller than fence. Worked for me.
I climbed the play area quickly, and found myself in a small clubhouse
with the roof high above me. I
tried to see what was in the house, but I couldn’t get a good angle on it. I worked my way to the outside of the
little clubhouse, and climbed slowly to the top of the awning supports. I straddled the top beam of the clubhouse,
and looked out over the yard to the house beyond.
It was as every bit as dark as the
front. A small stream worked its
way through the properties in this area, and I could see it was deep enough to
dam if they wanted a supply of water and fish right outside of their door. A big bay window allowed me to peek in
the interior of the house and look around. At the worst, I could see of there was anyone living there
at all that my Dad could visit.
From my perch I could see very
little. It was dark and gloomy,
and there didn’t seem to be anyone around. The house was very neat, and there didn’t seem to be a speck
of dirt anywhere.
That last thought struck me as
odd. Shouldn’t there be some
dust? Just as I pondered that a
face appeared in the far window. I
was so startled I nearly fell off the swing set. As it was, I managed to nock an arrow and aim a shaft at the
face staring out at me.
As quickly as It had appeared, it
was gone. I wondered for a minute
while I composed myself. I was
breathing hard, wondering if I had seen a ghost. Just for the heck of it, I
aimed the arrow at the house and let go, not caring where it hit. I lowered the bow and as I climbed out
of the playset I heard a bang as the arrowI shot collided with something
sturdy. I had a lot to tell Trey, and the sooner the better.
I ran back to the street and down
to the cul-de-sac. One of the
homes was occupied, and I could see people moving about as the day was coming
to a close. I worked my way over
to the back of the furthest house, guessing Trey’s would be right on the
line.
I checked the area, and didn’t see
any problems, so I slipped down the bank of the creek and worked my way slowly
across the creek. I didn’t mind
getting wet, I knew I was going to be home soon and would be able to dry off
quickly. Dad might wonder what
took me so long, but he’d forget about it as soon as I told him the valley
house was occupied.
On the other side of the creek I
had to be wary of Trey’s nets and trap lines, and it took me a good ten minutes
just to clear his yard. Crossing
the road, I went through the gate of my own property, and stopped cold. In the middle of the yard, sticking out
of the ground, was my arrow, the one I had shot at the valley house. I didn’t know what to do. I was panicky, because I didn’t want my
dad to find out and I really didn’t want my mom to find out.
I raced to the garage and put away
my gear, dripping water all over the floor. Molly, dad’s mare, looked at me with big brown reproachful
eyes as I stumbled and dropped things all over the place. I threw an extra handful of grass in
her bin to keep her quiet, then I went back out to the yard.
The arrow was still there, sticking
accusingly in the lawn. I ran over
to it and removed it, pulling up a good chunk of dirt. The broad head dripped soil, and as I
looked it over I was struck by another surprise.
This
wasn’t my arrow.