Read Before the Darkness (Refuge Inc.) Online
Authors: Leslie Lee Sanders
Tags: #erotic MM, #Romance MM
threatened to induce vomiting on several
occasions, forcing him to eat some dried fruit
before he ended up dry heaving all night.
The dust continued to fall from above at
a steady pace; not changing much since he'd left
the hospital. The sheer existence of the dust
made him believe that he was probably right
about the dark clouds and what it brought with
it. It troubled him to think of being surrounded
by trickling particles of asteroid and the strange
filth it produced upon impact.
He looked back toward the tiny pixel of
light far in the distance. Nearly an hour passed
and he hadn't found a thing, not a painted R, a
lyer, nothing whatsoever. He was on the verge
of walking in a totally different direction. Maybe
he'd missed some signs.
Maybe—
The ground beneath his feet began to
tremble. Adam anchored himself between a wall
and a large metal dumpster that he assumed
was once in some grimy alley. Maybe
he
was in a
grimy alley and hadn't realized it. The dumpster
rumbled like a drum as it rattled and bounced
around.
The
noise
was
overwhelming,
reverberating in his ears. And before he knew it,
the quaking stopped. Were these quakes some
sort of aftershock? They had started out strong
and in close proximity to one another, but then
they became less intense and less frequent. How
many more would there be until the quakes
ceased for good?
Adam looked in every direction, using
what ruined landmarks he could make out as
guides. He wasn't sure which way he wanted to
continue walking in. He couldn't determine
which direction made better sense to follow.
However, something caught his eye. When
looking back toward the hospital, he couldn't
ind that soft pixel of light anymore. He strained
his eyes looking for the shining light that glowed
from the hospital windows, a licker, something.
Instead he found nothing but darkness
encircling him from all sides. He switched off the
lashlight, allowing the darkness to swamp his
eyes so he could easily ind the tiniest pinprick
of light out there in the night.
Nothing.
Had the backup lights inally gone out for
good? Suddenly he knew what direction he
needed to go in …back to the hospital.
He licked the switch to turn the lashlight
back on, but it didn't come back on. "Damn it."
He hit the handle against his sweaty palm
repeatedly until the light came on but
immediately it went out again. "Damn batteries."
He quickly took his pack off and blindly
searched inside for the extra batteries he had
thrown in there. Once he found them he worked
hastily, removing the lashlight head, feeling for
the little metal nub at the end of each battery to
determine the correct way to place them inside
the handle.
Being subjected to the pitch black had a
way of making him feel completely vulnerable.
He imagined dark, blood-sucking creatures
making their way to him under the cover of the
darkness. Even as he replaced the lashlight
batteries he felt as if he were quickly trying to
load a gun with bullets to defend himself from
the half dead and hungry creature waiting to
sink its sharp teeth into his flesh.
The light came on and he quickly swung
the lashlight around, looking over his shoulder
at the environment as goose bumps covered his
arms. He chuckled. "Creatures of the night," he
mumbled. "I must be crazy."
He hoisted his pack on his shoulder and
began the tedious walk back to the hospital. The
only thing that bothered him as much as not
inding Refuge Inc. was the scuf le between him
and Elliot. Thinking about the punch that landed
on his temple made the side of his face throb,
but he didn't want to give the ight that kind of
power over him. Naturally when he stopped
thinking about it the throbbing ceased. He didn't
want to acknowledge the ight at all. Harboring
harsh feelings toward someone who only
wished to help him and keep him safe wasn't
part of his character.
He
just
chalked
it
off
as
a
misunderstanding, a stress related mishap that
wouldn't happen again.
There were much more important things
to worry about in their shattered world.
The trek did a number on his leg and
thigh muscles, but he inally made it back to the
unlit hospital. He expected Elliot and Titan to
greet him, but found nothing in the room where
he'd left them, only dark corners and
unrecognizable silhouettes instead.
"Elliot!" he called out. He ran to the stairs
and rushed up the staircase to the second loor
ICU. Edna and Harold were sitting on the bed
with a small candle. "You guys alright?"
"We're just ine." Edna nodded. She held
the outer glass shell of the small red candle on
her lap. "So he found you?"
Adam stood in the wide doorway,
shaking his head. "Who?"
"Your friend," Harold said and pointed a
bony inger Adam could barely make out in the
dim red glow of the candle. "Uh, what's his name
again?"
"Elliot," Edna inished. "He went out some
odd hours ago looking for you."
"He left?" Adam felt his eyes widen and
his palms start to sweat from the intense feeling
of dread that quickly hit him. "It's dangerous out
there. He doesn't even have the things he needs
and his leg—"
"He told us about that dust falling out
there, and I tried to talk some sense into him,"
Edna said in her matter-of-fact tone. "He said he
needed to ind you and bring you back here. He
took that dog and left."
"I gotta go get him." Adam rushed down
the hall.
"Hey, wait," Harold called out. "Did you
find the refuge?"
Before Adam hit the stairs he answered,
"Not yet. But when I do I'll send help for you. I
promise." He promptly made his way down the
stairs, out of the hospital and back into the
gloom.
Why would Elliot do something as stupid
as leave the hospital, and when did he muster
up the courage to suddenly do so? Adam walked
the same trail he took the irst time he went out.
He didn't know which direction to go or which
direction Elliot would take. His strategy was to
backtrack toward the freeway overpass where
Elliot irst felt weakened. If Elliot were looking
for him, he would look where they both had
seen the last sign. That spray painted sign was
on the concrete wall at the start of the freeway
overpass. Adam swept the light across the dark,
dirtied path, looking for footprints or other
signs that Elliot's had walked the same path.
Still, nothing.
Why hadn't he crossed paths with him on
his return?
After a slow, tiring hour of dragging his
feet, Adam sat on the edge of the sidewalk and
yawned. He'd depleted his energy. Surrounding
him were nothing but the frightening darkness
and the soft taps of ash hitting a crinkled piece
of newspaper on the ground next to him. As he
looked around his blackened environment, he
hoped to hear Elliot or Titan's footsteps. Elliot
wouldn't have gone out without some sort of
light, how else would he expect to ind him.
However, Adam didn't see light for miles in
every direction.
"Elliot!" he yelled into the night. "Elliot,
you there? Can you hear me?"
He waited, listening for anything in
return and again got nothing.
He rested for a few minutes before going
farther towards the freeway. Long, slow minutes
dragged on. His light was strong enough to light
up a space ifteen feet ahead, where inally he
saw a line of abandoned vehicles and the
painted R where the two of them had rested
before making their detour to the hospital.
The road he was on lead him straight
onto the freeway overpass. The road was
divided into six lanes with a narrow concrete
median. A few cars on his side of the median
were parked parallel to each other on all three
lanes, cars that were once attempting to leave
the city going south toward Tucson. But where
had the occupants gone? Surely they didn't have
enough time to walk out of the city before the
earthquakes begun. Could they have gotten
another ride? The cars were crammed in
around themselves as if they were involved in
some sort of collision. And he hadn't seen any
dead bodies other than the one's he'd seen
crowding the inside of his neighborhood church
when he first began his trek.
There had been about a couple dozen
bodies in that church, some slumped over in the
pews, other's gathered around the full size
plastered image of Christ, holding onto each
other like children grasping their father's
coattail when he'd threatened to leave them
behind. The empty Styrofoam cups were
crushed in their deathly grips or lying amongst
their bodies like trash. Adam knew better than
to assume the cups where just trash. The things
people resorted to. The horrors he witnessed
and wished he hadn't seen.
Though, the abandoned vehicles made
him wonder. Who had abandoned them and
where were these people? Could they have
followed the painted signs to Refuge Inc.?
Adam walked past the painted R and
farther down the freeway overpass, carefully
weaving in between cars and their wreckage as
he made his way down the bridge. The arrow
near the R pointed south, now he could continue
to go in the direction he had intended to go
before Elliot had gotten sick, and they had to
make the detour to the hospital. If Elliot
wandered this direction he would have made it
much farther than the overpass by now. But
there was no way to know for sure which way
Elliot had gone. So Adam kept walking. He'd run
into Elliot or refuge either way.
Almost to the middle of the bridge, Adam
stopped and shined his light on another R
painted on the outer concrete wall. This
particular R pointed up, which indicated he
needed to turn west at that exact moment. But
the sign in the center of the bridge pointed in a
direction that was impossible for him to go
unless he jumped off the bridge.
Adam scratched his head. He leaned over
the outer wall of the bridge, which was nearly
chest height, and shined his flashlight down onto
the dust and trash littered freeway about twenty
feet beneath him. A lone white minivan was
parked on the freeway, and spray painted on
the hood was another R that pointed west.
Bizarre. The minivan was the only vehicle
on the freeway beneath him and it couldn't have
been on the lane for more than a few days.
Adam stepped back, dumbfounded. What was
going on? That question repeated in his head
like the reverberation of a ringing bell when he
felt a cold wetness on his shirt. He looked down,
surprised to see his shirt sticky with black wet
paint. He examined the painted R on the wall in
front of him and couldn't believe his eyes.
The paint was fresh. Someone had just
painted the wall.
"Hey," he called out to nothingness. "Hey,
anybody there? I need help. We need help.
Anybody?"
Adrenaline kicked in and excitement
rushed through him making him idgety. His
chest rose and fell rapidly as he tried to catch
his breath. He didn't know what to do but follow
the direction the arrow pointed. He shined the
light down the side of the road he was on. He
stood in the middle of the bridge, debating. It
seemed like a complete waste of time to walk to
one end of the long bridge or the other just to
ind his way down a ramp to the freeway below,