Post-Apocalyptic Nomadic Warriors (27 page)

BOOK: Post-Apocalyptic Nomadic Warriors
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THIRTY-TWO

 

 

There was no fanfare. No crowds, no throngs of grateful citizens rushed the Silver Lining. Roy walked slowly ahead of the coach and guided it to the middle of the town. The Silver Lining jiggled; riddled with bullet holes, cracked from constricting vines, its structure had been weakened. A quick drive from Dallas that had disregarded potholes and all but the largest pieces of debris had accelerated the decay of the coach.

Jerry pulled close to the town hall barn in the center of town and shifted into park. Before he could stand, Erica was out the door and charging toward where the town had bound Logan against an old lamppost. Jerry stepped from the cabin in time to see her strike him across the face. She reeled back for another blow when two of the townspeople rushed in and held her back.

“Let go of me!” She kicked as they dragged her back and ground her heels into the brown dirt of Town Square.

Jerry ran up to the struggle.

“This man murdered my family!” She spit at Logan.

Logan shrugged. Blotches of purple welts blended into the scars on his face. His mouth bled from a missing tooth and he panted deeply. Still, he grinned.

Jerry ripped the hands of the townspeople from her arms and waist. Trying to calm her, he took her hands in his and tried to see past the rage in her eyes.
 

“Erica, Erica, Erica,” he pleaded to get her attention from anger; she was hysterical and would not look at him. He shook her gently by the shoulders. Finally she looked into his eyes. There was calm there. He stared into her gaze for a moment, released her hands and said, “Knock that grin off of his face, please.”

She smiled and returned to kicking and slapping the bound man. Logan moaned as she drove her feet into his ribs. He shrieked as she punched him in the face.

The citizens rushed in again, but Jerry stood between them and the beating. “Guys, why not?”

The people of New Hope pondered the question for a moment, looked to one another, shrugged and walked away.

Jerry grabbed one by the arm, “Where’s the mayor?”

“Here.” The man strode over to Jerry and cast only a glance at the girl beating the man they once trusted. “Thank God you showed up when you did.”

“Actually, I showed up earlier.” Jerry looked to Roy who was only steps behind the mayor.

“Roy!”

Roy began to stammer. Jerry cut him off.

“It doesn’t matter, you don’t have much time.” He was interrupted by a loud groan from Logan.

“You son of a bitch!” Erica had Logan by the hair and was driving his head against the post repeatedly.

The two men stepped a few feet away. Erica’s curses and Logan’s grunts provided the ambient sounds for the conversation.

“The truck will be on its way by now.” Jerry pointed in the truck’s general direction.

The mayor had always done his best to appear a fearless leader, but now, his composure was lost. “Our defenses are useless.”

“You’re not going to need them …”

“Little-prick bastard.” Erica’s insults began coming with heavier breaths.

Logan groaned and lost another tooth.

Jerry crossed the courtyard to get away from the noise.

The mayor followed close behind, pleading for an answer to the situation. “How will we protect the town?”

“You won’t.”

“I don’t understand.”

Jerry finally spotted what he needed across the courtyard. “Does that pickup run?”

“Yes.”

“Good, I’ll need three men. You should probably make it ones you don’t like very much.”

“Now, hold on …”

“Your defenses are rigged. Your weapons are crap. You can’t defend this town. The only chance is to stop the truck before they get here.”

A new style of swearing came from behind them. The two men turned to see that Sarah had joined Erica and was helping her beat Logan. The mayor made a move to stop her. Jerry waved it off, “Let her help. Erica’s hand has got to be getting sore by now.”

The mayor nodded.

“Now, have three men meet me by my coach and get that pickup running.”

The mayor agreed and started barking names to the crowd that had gathered around them.

Jerry pulled Erica and Sarah off of Logan. He received a few kicks for the effort, but the girls relented. Logan had collapsed to the ground; only his shackled hands kept him from being a heap on the ground. Still, he laughed, while grinning through broken teeth and busted lips.

“You’re dead, Bookworm. You can’t stop us now.”

Jerry took a knee in front of the con man.

“I don’t know what these people are going to do to you. But I do know that I’m not going to stop them. How many people have died at your hands? How many towns razed?”

“We’re all just trying to survive out here.”

“Not all of us.”

“You should have seen the look on your face when we marched into that town in Colorado. Everything started breaking. All of your plans collapsing.” Logan laughed. “That look was better than the score we took that day.”

“I’m going to stop them, Logan. No one else will die because of you.”

Jerry turned away. Logan spit blood after him.

Erica was doubled over crying. Her knuckles matched her bloody fingers. He put an arm around her and whispered in her ear, “Erica, it’s going to be okay.”

“How can you say that? You haven’t lost what I have.”

Jerry lifted her chin. “You haven’t lost your family.”

She mocked him, “Oh, sure, they’ll always be with me as long they’re in my heart.”

“Not in your heart. In the trailer behind the truck.”

Her eyes grew wide. She said nothing.

“They weren’t killed. They were taken prisoner.”

She began to sob and smile.

“I’m going to save them.”

She looked at him through puffy eyes and hugged him, “I know you will.” She kissed him on the cheek. She didn’t linger, but there was warmth in her lips that held.

The mayor approached with Roy Tinner and the three volunteers: Carl Parker, Timothy Simmons, and the sheriff.

Roy stuck out his hand. “I would like to take this opportunity to apologize for my behavior when you first arrived.”

“Fuck you, Roy. This is Erica. She was at a town called Vita Nova when the truck rolled through. Please take care of her and my three young friends here.” The boys had finally emerged from the Silver Lining. Austin still wore his mask. The other two peeked out from behind the collars of their bear suits.

“The bears?” Roy asked.

“Yes, Roy, the bears. Why don’t you start filling out some forms?” Jerry moved to the door of the coach.

Alex tugged at his elbow, “But we want to come with you.”

Jerry put his hand on the boy’s shoulder, “You boys have done enough. Stay here. Watch Chewy for me.”

Jerry stepped into the coach and emerged a moment later with an armload of weapons and a belt slung over his shoulder. He called the three volunteers and began handing out weapons.

“Who’s driving?”

Carl stepped forward and raised his hand. “The name’s Carl, but people around here call me the Gadgeteer.”

“No, they don’t.”

“Shut up, Timmy.” Carl was disappointed the name hadn’t caught on in the few days Logan was around.

A bulletproof vest struck the Gadgeteer in the face and fell into his hands.

“What’s this?”

“Body armor.”

Timothy, the whiny councilman, “Why does he get body armor?”

“He needs to live the longest.” Jerry checked his own weapons. Across his chest, he strapped an MP5 he had taken from an abandoned police station. The Colt 1911s were holstered at his waist.
 

“All right; two in the front and one in the back with me. We’re going stop that truck.”

 

THIRTY-THREE

 

 

The noise created by the massive semi could be heard for miles. Stealth wasn’t a part of its arsenal. The four trailers rattled incessantly as they each found bumps and debris in the road.

The survivors of Vita Nova and two other towns, Hope Pointe and Point Hope, huddled in the prison car. Starving and broken, they no longer looked through the grates of the former pig trailer or at the landscape passing by at forty-five miles an hour.

They also didn’t see the blue and white 4x4 launch up the shoulder of the road until it was right beside them.

“Everyone get to the back of the trailer!” Jerry screamed through the grates. He stood in the back of the pick up with one hand on the light bar and the other holding a .45.

A soldier appeared on top of the trailer ahead of the prison car and opened fire on the truck.

Carl swerved as the bullets began to pour down.

Jerry and the sheriff fired back. The soldier took a bullet in the leg and collapsed from the roof of the trailer. He didn’t fall far. A safety harness snapped taught, slammed the soldier against the side of the trailer, and turned him upside down. Fighting against momentum and the harness itself, he struggled to right himself. His weapon fell to the highway and bounced underneath the wheel of the truck.

“Get to the back!” Jerry shouted again as the other man in the truck bed began firing at more soldiers that had appeared at the roofline of the trailer.

The prisoners were snapped from their stupor and began to rush to the back of the trailer.

Jerry tapped on the back of Carl’s head and the truck sped up. They pulled next to the coupling arm of the prison trailer. Gunshots rang out around him as he holstered the gun and steadied himself to jump.

A right curve in the road caused the rig to veer. The pickup was forced to follow. The sudden turn threw Jerry off balance. He was forced to grab the light bar just to stay in the bed of the truck.

As the rig veered to follow the curve, the gun turret behind the plow caught sight of the pickup. The gunner frantically tried to turn the turret and fire on the 4 x 4. The road straightened before he could fire.

The first guard dangled by his safety harness and was struggling to pull himself between the two trailers and out of harm’s way.
 

Jerry leaned down and yelled to Timothy through the missing window. “Watch that gunner!” Carl hunkered down behind the wheel, trying to hide his round figure behind the bulletproof vest.
 

Jerry found a rhythm in the sway of the pickup and made his leap. He crashed chest first across the spar that joined the prison car to the trailer in front of it.

His feet dangled and bounced against the passing ground. He could feel the texture of the asphalt through the leather of his boots. He struggled to pull himself up, while his allies in the truck continued to fire at the soldiers on the roof.
 

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