Authors: Brett Battles
Tags: #fastpaced, #scary, #Plague, #apocalypse, #Suspense, #mojave, #Desert, #2012, #Thriller, #army
Chloe had been standing nearby the whole time, watching him. He wasn’t sure if she’d been expecting him to give her a gun, but she didn’t ask and he didn’t offer.
“Let’s go,” he said.
They hiked for a quarter of an hour, then as they approached a ridge, Chloe motioned for him to get down on his hands and knees. When they reached the top, they dropped to their stomachs and looked down into the tree-filled valley.
At first, Ash thought it was as empty as the forest they’d just come through, but then Chloe pointed down and to the right. About a half-mile away he saw part of a roof jutting out from the side of the hill, like the structure was built right into the earth. If there was anything else around, he couldn’t see it through the trees.
She then pointed at one of the evergreens about ten yards ahead of them, then at another about the same distance to the left, then at another and another.
“Twenty feet up,” she said.
It took him a couple seconds to see what she was talking about. Attached to each tree at the height she’d indicated were some sort of electronic devices that had been colored to blend in. If Chloe hadn’t pointed them out, he would have never noticed them.
“What are they?” he asked.
“Motion sensors. They circle the complex. You can’t see it, but another fifty feet beyond that point is a fence.”
Ash studied the area for a moment. “I take it there’s a way through there.”
Chloe shook her head. “Not that I know of.”
“But Matt told me you could get me in.”
“That’s true.”
He stared at her for a moment. “You want to stop being so cryptic?”
Several seconds passed, then she said, “This used to be an old mental hospital. It was closed sometime in the nineties and the land was turned over to the government, but don’t expect to find it in any of their records. The…others took it over and fixed it up for their own needs. It’s not one of their main facilities so they don’t always use it. But according to Matt, this is where your kids were taken.”
“You still haven’t told me how I get in.”
“There used to be a separate building where the mental hospital kept…problem patients. The building’s gone, but the foundation is still there.” She looked at Ash. “It’s outside the motion detection zone.”
“How does that help us?” Ash asked, still not following.
“They might have torn down the building, but they didn’t remove the tunnel that connected it to the main hospital.”
31
The throbbing in Paul’s knee had become so constant he almost didn’t notice it any more. He wished the same could be said for his growing thirst. His dry mouth and chapped lips were constantly nagging at him.
He’d reached the summit of the hill that marked the boundary of the quarantine zone thirty minutes earlier, but any elation he might have felt had been tempered by the miles of open desert that still stretched before him.
He coughed a couple times, then glanced down at his gas gauge. The needle was hovering just above E. He’d be walking soon, and in his condition, he wouldn’t be walking far. If only he could find a road, hopefully someone would drive by and see him. Or perhaps it was his lot to die out here like his brother and his girlfriend. The only difference being that his fate would be delivered by the elements, not a slug of lead.
The ground was rising again in front of him like a gentle swell in the middle of a dirt ocean. As he did every time he neared a crest, he prayed that he’d finally see a road on the other side, anything that would give him a chance.
“This time,” he began repeating. “This time. This time. This time.”
Just before he actually reached the top, he steeled himself and prepared to see nothing. He was so sure that was exactly what would happen, that even as he stared at the distant highway, it took a moment before he realized what it was.
He stopped the bike, his good foot planting on the ground. Was the highway real? Maybe the pain and the dust and the lack of water were making him see things. He wanted to believe, but…could he?
His eyes followed the road, then his breath caught in his throat.
Not five miles away, he saw a handful of buildings grouped together. Parked around them appeared to be several cars and a couple of buses. He blinked. The buildings were still there. The cars and the buses were still there.
Finally allowing himself a smile, he started down the hill. He was tempted to open the bike up all the way, but he knew even five miles might be too far for the fumes left in his gas tank. So he eased all the way back on the accelerator and let the bike roll free down the hill.
He was laughing as he neared the bottom, his hand poised to feed the rest of the gas into the engine as soon as his speed started to slow. That’s when he heard it. The thumping.
He didn’t need to look back to know what was there, but he did anyway.
Two helicopters, like black blots against the western afternoon sky.
There was no doubt in his mind that these were the same two that had come to the canyon that morning, that had brought the men who had killed two of the people he loved most. And though he was out of the quarantine zone, he knew they were here to kill him, too.
He jammed on the gas and shot toward the buildings, already knowing they were too far away and that the helicopters would reach him first.
If only he hadn’t stopped at the top of the ridge. If only he hadn’t fallen off the bike and hurt his knee. If only he hadn’t delayed himself a half dozen other times. But he couldn’t change any of that now.
The only thing he could do was ride.
• • •
Martina Gable and the rest of the Burroughs High School softball team were doing what they’d been doing for the last day and a half. Nothing.
They’d been heading home in a school bus from a tournament in Reno, Nevada, when the quarantine had been imposed over much of the Mojave Desert, including their hometown of Ridgecrest. Unfortunately, one of the girls was pumping a steady mix of pop from her iPod through the bus’s sound system, so no one had been listening to the radio at the time. But why would they have done that? They’d come in second in the tournament, much better than they’d hoped, so they had reason to enjoy themselves on the way home.
Ten miles past Cryer’s Corner, they reached the roadblock and learned for the first time what was going on. Initially, there’d been panic and fear, of course. But when they went back to Cryer’s Corner—not much more than a wide spot in the road with a café, a gas station, and a small convenience store—they were able to use the land phones there to contact their families and find out that everyone was fine.
They’d talked about driving back into Nevada to find someplace to stay, but when Coach Driscoll called around looking for a motel, everywhere she tried was full. Apparently the quarantine was stranding people all over the place.
The Cryer family owned all the businesses at Cryer’s Corner. They offered to let the girls sleep on the floor of the café, so that’s what the coach decided they’d do.
As the day progressed, a few other cars drove in—a couple of families and some solo drivers. They, too, were offered places to sleep.
The coaches tried to organize a practice out behind the café that first afternoon to distract the girls, but it didn’t work out too well. So this second day they’d pretty much let everyone do what they pleased, as long as they didn’t cause any trouble.
Martina had played catch with her friend Noreen for a while, then had thumbed through one of the gossip magazines another girl had brought along. After lunch, she’d found a spot on the side of the gas station, and was idly tossing rocks at a dumpster, wishing the damn quarantine would be lifted so they could go home. This put her at a good angle to see the helicopters the moment they popped over the hill.
Immediately, she got up and went around to the front of the station where several others were hanging out.
“Helicopters,” she said, pointing.
Since everyone on the softball team lived next to the China Lake Navy base, they were used to the sight of jets and helicopters. But having already spent a day of monotony on the side of the road, seeing them now felt like something new.
“From the roadblock?” Cathy Thorwaldson asked.
“I didn’t see any out there,” Martina said. “Did you?”
“Maybe they flew in during the night while we were sleeping.” This came from one of the drivers who’d arrived alone, a college-age guy. Cute, too.
“Hadn’t thought of that,” Martina said.
“Do you hear that?” their catcher, Jilly Parker, asked. She’d been standing near the pumps but had taken a few steps toward the desert.
Martina listened. There was a very faint whine in the distance. “The helicopters, probably.”
Jilly shook her head. “Doesn’t sound like helicopters.”
A couple seconds later, they all heard a rhythmic
thump-thump-thump
.
“
That’s
the helicopters,” Jilly said.
She was right, Martina realized. The whine was still there, too. Its volume had increased a bit, and it seemed to be coming from ground level as opposed to the sky.
• • •
Sims was crouched just behind the two front seats of the helicopter, trying to spot the motorcycle below. The satellite images had gotten them this far, but now it was a matter of eyeballs.
“There, sir,” the co-pilot said, with a quick nod out the window. “Running along that old wash.”
Sims adjusted his position, then immediately saw movement about a mile ahead.
“Get us down there.”
“Sir,” the pilot said. “We’re already twenty miles outside the containment zone.”
“I don’t care where we are. If the person on that bike is infected, we could have a new outbreak on our hands. Our job is to make sure that doesn’t happen.”
Yet
, he thought, but didn’t add.
The other thing he didn’t voice was his desire to clean up a situation that they had created themselves. The person on the motorcycle had come from the canyon they’d visited that morning. Apparently there hadn’t been two riders, but three. This third person must have hidden from Sims and his men, and that annoyed him.
It should have never happened. They should have checked for additional people but they hadn’t, and it had been his fault. Two bikes, two sleeping bags, two people. Logical, but wrong.
“Hang on, sir,” the pilot said.
A second later, the helicopters dipped in unison toward the fleeing motorcycle.
• • •
Jilly and Martina used a stack of barrels to climb up on top of the gas station, then moved to the back edge so they could see what was going on.
“That whine’s a motorcycle. I’d know that anywhere,” Jilly said.
Martina had recognized it, too. It was a common enough noise in the desert around Ridgecrest. But though she was looking toward where she thought the noise was coming from, she couldn’t see anything.
Jilly suddenly pointed repeatedly at the desert. “There, there, there!”
Martina put a hand on her forehead, shading her eyes. “I don’t see it.”
“It’s there! Along that wash.”
Something glinted in the distance, sunlight on a helmet, Martina realized as she finally spotted the motorcycle rider. For a few moments, she watched him—she assumed it was a him—heading in their direction.
“Is that one of the people who lives here?” she wondered out loud.
“I didn’t hear anyone leave earlier, but I guess it could be,” Jilly said.
Until that moment, Martina had thought the helicopters and the motorcycle had had nothing to do with each other. But suddenly both helicopters dove down toward the bike.
“What are they doing?” she asked.
• • •
Under Sims’s directions, the helicopters bracketed the motorcycle, his aircraft coming up on its left, the other on its right.
“We’ll take the shot,” Sims said into the radio. “If he doesn’t go down, you’re up.”
• • •
Paul felt the thumping of the helicopters in his chest. He allowed himself a quick glance back, and was surprised to see they were approaching him from either side.
There was movement at the open door of the helicopter to his left. He turned forward, checking the terrain ahead, then chanced another glance back. A man stood in the doorway now, held in place by what looked like a strap. In his arm was a rifle.
Without even thinking about it, Paul released the accelerator and pulled on the brakes.
Just then he heard something whiz by him through the air. Involuntarily, he jerked the handlebars to the side. The front tire of the bike turned with it, catching the edge of a sagebrush. Before Paul knew it, he was once more tumbling through the air.
• • •
“Is that a hit?” Sims asked. “Is that a hit?”
There was a brief delay. “I’m not sure, sir. But he
is
down.”
“Get us back there.”