Saint Pain (Zombie Ascension Book 3) (21 page)

BOOK: Saint Pain (Zombie Ascension Book 3)
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Why didn’t they cuff Vincent? Taylor was gambling with their lives; maybe he figured Vincent couldn’t go far, even if he managed to get his hands on a gun and get the hell out of there.

But they were all strapped with as many guns as they could carry. Loaded down with ammunition and cans of dog food for them to eat with plastic forks. They were traveling light.

“Keep your ass moving,” Suede said, his words slurred by creeping heat exhaustion.

“Don’t let me slow you down,” Vincent said. He’d been in worse heat before. In Iraq. His whole life had been one hot, hellish, warzone.

It would be so easy to taunt them, make them lose whatever calm they had left.

Suede couldn’t resist pushing him.

“Louis was loyal to you,” Suede said.

Here we go.

This had been building up for a long time. Better to let him talk.

“He was back at the house with Chanell, and I found her out here, walking around, all fucked-up. She was back at the house—she could have walked, but I bet she tried to find you when she was alive. Tried to come down to the neighborhood. Tried to find your ass. But you were hiding. Where’d you go? Huh? Where’d you hide?”

Vincent didn’t so much as shrug. He kept his eyes forward on the train tracks ahead of them.

“I’m talking to you, nigga. You need to answer me.”

Vincent kept walking. He knew Taylor was watching this go down, and he wasn’t about to let his precious hostage lose his life. No way. Vincent had
guns
, and someone other than Taylor, someone
bigger,
wanted them too.

Somebody named Sutter.

“You had a whole crew in the neighborhood, fighting the war,” Suede continued. “Lost damn near everybody, and we waited. We figured you were coming out. We needed you. We got split up, tried to get to the house, but they never made it. I know they never made it because you
did
come back. You came back and made everyone think you were king shit.”

His voice was becoming louder.

Let him pour on the guilt.

“You came back with another bitch after Chanell
died
for you, man. You didn’t even make an attempt to get back. I know you didn’t because when I found her, I figured it out. I figured it all out. You left our asses in the meat grinder. I watched Fireball get his shit ripped to pieces, and you weren’t
nowhere
to be found.”

The tracks wound through an industrial park, past streets filled with broken cars and wandering corpses that were suddenly attentive.

And Vincent listened. He heard every word. Through Suede’s words, he could hear the moaning dead.

He wanted to hear it. Some of these things he said to himself, over and over again, over the past few months. After thinking he was some kind of hero for saving Vega during her botched mission.

And Suede kept going. Someone told him to keep his voice down, but Suede must not have heard. Vincent only wished he could look into the man’s eyes while he kept up his tirade.

But Suede didn’t understand the idea of a warzone. He should, but didn’t. Even if he fought during the initial outbreak and then laid low for a while, he still didn’t seem to get the idea that death was everywhere, waiting for them.

“We gotta move,” Taylor said. “Don’t look behind you. Keep moving.”

Someone looked behind them.

“Shit. We gotta move, man.”

“Where we going?” someone asked. “We should just make a run for it.”

“We need Vincent,” Taylor said. “You want to make a break for it, you’re on your own. You stay, and keep this man alive.”

“Fuck this shit!” someone else said.

“They’re all over us. I ain’t doing this. I ain’t doing this…”

Now Vincent smiled.

Suede walked beside him.

“This nigga ain’t going to save us,” Suede said. “Couldn’t save us before. Couldn’t do
shit,
and here we are.”

“Pick up the pace!”

Vincent nearly tripped over the tracks.

Bushes moved. The moaning was close. The smell more pungent.

“Fuck this,” someone said, and ran ahead.

Vincent was convinced Taylor was going to cut him down, not let him get away with the guns and supplies he carried, but Taylor was smart enough not to do anything more to draw attention to themselves.

They kept moving along the tracks. They passed an industrial building with a parking lot that didn’t have any cars in it, but it was full of dead people with their arms hanging stiffly at their sides as if they expected the wind to pick them up and send them flying. There was a hole in the fence around the parking lot, separating it from the tracks.

No road was safe.

Time was against them: if they took the winding suburban streets they would still have to cross main boulevards to get where they needed to go. This would be the most direct path, at least, Vincent could only assume. But he didn’t know where they were going.

But he knew what was about to happen.

“Oh man, oh man…” someone said.

And here they were, walking over the Southfield Freeway, which wasn’t much of a freeway at this juncture; an auto service shop, a Sunoco, cars mashed into each other at the traffic light, corpses struggling to find their way through the labyrinth of metal and wreckage. A string of power lines were down along the train tracks, along with the long silver transmission towers, broken and scattered across the road, as if all the towers had pulled each other down at once.

“Stay on the tracks,” Taylor said as they maneuvered through cars that were stuck in their path.

Sweat poured from the top of Vincent’s head.

Gunfire. Not too far away. Gunfire and screams.

“Shit,” Taylor said.

The whole damn world might be following them along the tracks. The whole damn world might be closing in. There was nowhere to go. Nowhere safe.

“Damn it!” a member of their crew shouted. Everyone stopped, and they shouldn’t have. They should have kept walking.

An outstretched hand shot out from a car’s open door and clutched the man’s shin. Fingers dug deep and squeezed blood through the denim jeans.

Another member of their crew darted down the tracks, swearing, shouting.

The man whose shin was caught pointed a gun into the car and fired wildly; he leaned on the trigger and his bullets shattered glass and punched through upholstery. He tore his leg loose and kept firing.

“That didn’t take long,” Vincent said under his breath.

“And don’t think about running away.” Taylor pointed his gun at the back of Vincent’s head. “I need you to win this war. Keep going. Keep walking down those tracks.”

Nobody was walking down the tracks. They couldn’t help but break into a run. Taylor stood with Vincent and Suede for a moment too long. They watched the other men run ahead.

In a matter of moments, their group had disbanded.

But Taylor wanted to keep it together, and Suede’s intentions were obvious; he wanted to ice Vincent once and for all.

And now there were three men.

Taylor unholstered a handgun and handed it to Vincent.

“This was the only way you were going to get off your sorry ass,” Taylor said through gritted teeth. “You can thank me later.”

Vincent wasn’t about to thank anybody. And there wasn’t time to stand around and debate the issue. There wasn’t time to get over all the shit that stopped him when Vega’s life was on the line that last time; Suede and Taylor may have done him a favor, but his knee was screwed up. Running was out of the question.

So was discussion. They were surrounded already.

Gunfire. Screams.

The moaning of the damned.

Vincent turned and headed down the tracks.

“The fuck is going on?” Suede asked.

“You can shoot me later,” Vincent said.

“Grand Central Depot,” Taylor said and grabbed Vincent by the elbow, helping him limp along. “That’s where Sutter is. That’s where the troops are. If anything happens, you need to get there. They need you. This city needs you.”

This city never needed him.

But he wasn’t about to let the city kill him.

Stopped in the middle of the tracks was a train, and pouring out of the cars on either side were the mangled, half-chewed remnants of decayed human beings. A large group of them was huddled together, slurping and chewing, the wet, sloppy sounds that pigs made when they ate from a trough after going a day without food. Some of the corpses stood, blood and pulpy flesh matter dripping from their mouths and slipping through their fingers.

“Get your asses on top of the train,” Taylor said.

He had every intention of going
through
these bastards.

It was as good a plan as any.

Taylor positioned himself behind his M-16 and filled the dead things full of lead.

Vincent couldn’t climb up himself. Suede was going to have to make a decision.

But first, he had to make it to the train. He was still several feet away, and he couldn’t move. He watched the dead things stand, watched their eyes lock onto him as their bodies shook and rattled from bullet-spray. He had a gun in his hand, but he didn’t lift it.

Here he was again.

Stopped.

Frozen.

He stopped looking at their faces, at their various states of undeath, because it didn’t matter. They were all the same: they were the enemy. But now he looked at them. Just like he looked at that classroom full of kids in Iraq.

One corpse was missing its entire face, nothing but a lower jaw and shards of bone, the top of its head like a helmet keeping the brain inside. Tendons and bone moved through tattered clothing. It looked more like an unfinished machine.

Here was another. Head sideways because a chunk of muscle and flesh had been ripped from the neck. A woman, stringy hair still flowing from the shriveling flesh of the decaying
thing
. No, it wasn’t a
thing.
It was a dead woman who belonged in a grave. Her stomach was a wide-open hole, and between her legs a long tendril flapped, too thin to be intestine, too short to be anything else but a ropy placenta, crisped and dried from the rot of time. Flies buzzed through her stomach. Worms and maggots dripped from the hole.

They had been slumbering in the dirt. Something woke them up, startled them back into the waking world.

Where was everyone?

Mike’s gun sounded like it was far away.

“We have got to
go!”

It was Suede, pushing him, pulling him toward the train. Vincent dropped the gun Taylor had given him into the dirt. What a waste of a good weapon.

Vincent tried to climb up the side, and Suede boosted him up. From the top he could see the other men, the survivors who had worked with Taylor to bring Vincent across the city. He could see them only because he could track the crowds of zombies that hunted through the brush, and the bright flashes of gunfire through the trees. The dead were relentless. No matter how far they ran or for how long—they couldn’t fight forever. Their ammunition supply was limited. And instead of running, these men stopped and fired until they were dragged down by a pack of corpses.

And the dead were everywhere. The dead were converging.

“Give me a hand!”

Vincent didn’t think twice. He dropped to his good knee and helped Suede up the side of the train car.

Mike Taylor had stopped firing. He dropped his gun instead of reloading it.

Vincent knew what he was thinking.

He knew the feeling.

It didn’t matter if another gun was wasted, dropped.

Vincent stretched out his hand.

“Taylor!”

“Leave the motherfucker!” Suede said.

Taylor drew his sidearm and fired into a zombie’s face. Another. He turned and grabbed Vincent’s hand.

“Hold me down,” Vincent said, hoping Suede would hear him, help him.

Pressure on the back of his legs. On his bad knee. Pain he needed to ignore.

The old cop tried to scramble up the side of the car. His hand was slippery, his feet frantically trying to find purchase somewhere, anywhere. He wasn’t focused. He didn’t use his weight. He almost dangled from Vincent’s hand.

“Drop the gun,” Vincent said.

Taylor dropped the gun used both hands to grab Vincent’s. Vincent’s other hand joined, turning their desperation into one sweaty fist.

Taylor was coming up.

Pain in Vincent’s shoulders, legs, hips.

Sweat dripped into his eyes.

Taylor was rising, his eyes were narrow. The gray whiskers on his face were prominent, the dark shadows beneath his eyes visible in the bright sun which erupted through the blank, humid haze. The smell of mud and metal, an explosion of sunlight shuttering Taylor’s eyes while he grunted.

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