Here is an excerpt from my newest novel, Alpha Unit. Alpha Unit is Book Two in the Zombie Unit Series, and it takes place in South Texas just after the point where Book 1 ended. This excerpt covers the first fifty pages of the rough draft.
Chapter 1
They were
going to blow up a factory.
Tom
Martinez had no idea what kind of factory. He didn’t know where the factory
was. If he were to be completely honest, he couldn’t even confidently assert
that any factory existed.
He led a dazed gay painter through a prison
corridor, trying to ignore the horrendously loud siren and the pulsing lights.
The love of his life followed behind, minus one arm. He’d just discovered the
uncouth truth that the human being he’d been feeding off of for an undefined
period of time had actually been alive- or something resembling such a state-
the entire time Tom had been slicing off hunks of flesh and eating it. To top
it all off, the doctor leading them out of the macabre prison to blow shit up had
been watching him cannibalize corpses and stab people with fibulas.
Maybe it was an obscure fetish.
Watching people eat other people alive.
Dr. Octavio Ramirez walked fast.
His pace seemed martial, more of a march than a brisk stride. Something about the
man seemed to imply a military background. Tom followed along behind the man,
trying to keep himself alert. Tom felt frustrated. He had to keep looking back
at the vacant man who stymied his progress. Tom’s palm was slick with sweat,
yet his grip remained firm. Part of him wanted to dwell on exactly what it was
that compelled him to almost literally drag this man through the inferno. Mike
offered no strength, nothing of value, not in his current state.
Something caught his eye.
Tom turned to look. He paused.
Looking into a large dayroom
similar to the one he’d just vacated with his comrades and the nefarious
doctor, he saw a large group of people huddled in front of a large monitor.
Their faces were awash in the blue glow emanating from the device. Eyes glazed,
the unisex, uniformed body seemed absorbed in whatever it was displayed on the
screen. They seemed sucked into a collective consciousness.
As one, they suddenly looked up.
Their bloodshot eyes seemed to stare through him. A cold and obscene apathy,
almost as ugly as the clammy touch of a corpse, afflicted Tom. He withered
under the force of it.
None of them seemed terribly different. Other than the fact that they
all wore suits of thin, pale white flesh and blonde hair, and that their eyes
were red, nothing seemed off about
their general appearance. It was their eyes. The vapid, vast emptiness.
They began walking slowly towards
the door.
“What the hell?” Tom muttered. He
stayed rooted in place, however, eyes wide. He watched as the people toddled
towards the door, saliva glistening on the edges of their faces as it drew a
thin bead down from the corners of their mouths.
“Come on.”
Tom felt a tug at his arm. He
turned. His heart raced. He saw that Dr. Octavio had backtracked to come and
hurry him along. Tom wanted to resist. The desire to rebel, to balk asserted
itself deep inside. It possessed its own powerful force, that seeming
compulsion to act contrary to the wishes of his party’s guide. After all, just
not that long ago, Dr. Octavio had been complicit in watching them as they were
dismembered, mind raped, and left to die an ignominious and interminable death.
Trying to kill you ranks pretty high on the general list of reasons not to
fucking trust someone.
“What’s up with them?” Tom asked.
He strained his voice, trying to scream over the sirens. He glanced behind,
making sure his cohort was following. He still gripped Mike’s hand in his own.
They walked down a tight corridor.
The walls were lined with pocked white bricks. A faded red line led to
somewhere on the ugly blue-green floor. Lights encased in silver wire mesh wall
mounts pulsed with a garish red light. The shadows between the flashes seemed
to distort the length and shape of the hallway.
“Those patients were being tested
for psychological conditioning.” Octavio said.
“Patients?!” Tom asked,
incredulous. The word stung. He realized after a moment that he’d begun
unconsciously gripping Mike’s hand. He relaxed a bit. He felt the tension in
his neck and chest, however. Considering those captives “patients,” made Tom
angry. Almost like calling eugenics a social science.
Glancing back, Tom flinched. A
couple of people, blood crusted on their snarling faces, meandered down the
hallway, trailing them. One person, a bearded man with bits of brain matter
flecking his crimson mass of facial hair, wheeled himself in a wheelchair. That
one led the pack, and was gaining ground quicker than the others. In the small
span of time that encompasses a solitary glance, Tom thought he had seen someone
crawling, too.
“Delilah! Hurry.” Tom shouted. His
voice felt hoarse. His eyes weighed a ton. He wanted to fall into a deep and
prolonged slumber and forget any of this had ever happened.
Pulling hard on Mike, Tom picked up
the pace. He caught up with the fast-walking doctor. His body shook. His nerves
tingled.
A large blue metal door stood in
front of them. Doctor Octavio paused, bending down. The man seemed to stumble
as he fiddled through a large and complicated jumble of keys and square plastic
laminated cards hanging from a red-and-black lanyard. The man in the wheelchair
was gaining on them.
Tom looked back, trying to fight
the hot wave of panic assaulting his senses. He felt his vision going black
along the peripheries. His body seemed hot, febrile. Thoughts did a Persian
knife dance in his head. He watched with rising horror as the hirsute man with
the bulging biceps wheeled himself closer and closer by the second. When Tom
looked into the eyes of the man, he caught a glimpse of Hell. The inferno of
homicidal madness that raged in those malevolent eyes was enough to scorch
one’s marrow.
“Hurry.” Tom pleaded.
Doctor Octavio didn’t seem to care.
He appeared oblivious. The steady equanimity of the academic fuck was starting
to get on Tom’s nerves. If this zombie-like “patient,” managed to get close
enough, they were all going to die. As far as Tom knew, death might simply be a
gruesome beginning.
“Hurry.” Tom said, raising his
voice.
He walked back a few steps. Each
time he raised his foot, he felt as if what he were doing was the most
burdensome, difficult thing possible. His legs were weighted marble statues. But, the urge to place himself between the
viscous horde descending upon them and Delilah overcame all of the myriad
internal forces trying to knock him the fuck out. It was instinctual. He wanted
to protect her.
Maybe he even needed to.
Delilah was perhaps the only thing
left to remind him of what it meant to be human.
Chapter 2
The doctor pulled out a gun.
Tom flinched. He jumped. Trying to
shield both Delilah and Mike, he maneuvered himself so that he would be in the
path of Octavio’s gun, should the man with the macabre interests decide to turn
it upon them. He smirked. It felt a bit foolish, to be making such futile
gestures under the circumstances. But, in a way, it also seemed instinctual. Right. He’d never considered himself
much of a moral person, and he’d always followed the dictum that experience and
awareness are subjective entities. The whole cannibalism thing seemed to be
awakening some sense of goodness.
Tom thought about irony while the
bad doctor fired three shots into a disabled man.
Or, maybe a disabled zombie?
Tom startled with each loud report.
A distinctively bitter odor filled the air in front of his face. The noisome,
noxious cloud seemed to draw his breath away.
The former reporter lost all desire
to ponder the vagaries and vicissitudes of his life. He wanted to get the fuck
out of Dodge.
Doctor Octavio again began rifling
through his seemingly endless array of keys.
Looking back, he saw that the death
of their wheel-chair bound leader had done little to dampen their resolve. Or
their hunger. Tom wasn’t sure what it was, exactly, that motivated these…
people? These demonic creatures sheathed in a disarming suit of human flesh.
Their grossly distorted visages and lethargic movements appeared at first blush
almost exaggerated. For a brief moment, Tom wanted to dissolve into a fit of
raging laughter. The old hysteria threatened to undo any semblance of sanity he
had recouped in the days and weeks of barely existing on the fringes of
consciousness in a cell. Tom had the fleeting thought that maybe all of this
was just some sick joke.
He half-expected the zombies and
everyone just to stop mid-stride and yell: “surprise.”
But, they didn’t.
Instead, they just kept coming.
The tediously long approach seemed
like something pulled straight from a bad B-grade horror script. Tom cast aside
the queasy qualms and the querulous questions that clamored in his
fatigue-soaked mind. He took the opportunity, as he waited for the doctor to
somehow finally find the fucking key to salvation, to analyze the entities
ambling towards him. The piercing shrieks of the alarm still made it hard to
focus, but he wanted to see. To see. Knowledge
is power. Tom had been trained over the course of his life that observation was
fundamental to the acquisition of knowledge.
One of the zombies, if that were
the correct term, possessed a lithe body. The torn jumpsuit she wore exposed
pale freckled flesh and the outlines of what once might have been attractive,
supple breasts. A long, ugly red rash crossed the tender flesh at the base of
her neck. Several more rashes, some with raised or broken skin intermixed,
covered various other exposed appendages. Peering closer, Tom saw that a few of
them were almost purple in hue.
This woman possessed orange eyes
devoid of emotion. Apathy might have described them. Or Misanthropy. There was
a steel edge behind those eyes.
An epiphany seemed to be forming.
Tom felt on the verge of what might be an important revelation when something
tugged at his arm. Swinging violently to confront the mysterious force pulling
on him, he blinked and paled when he realized that it was only the doctor.
“Come on. Hurry.” Octavio said.
Tom inhaled. He began walking.
Thankfully after a few steps, he remembered to check to make sure his fellow
survivors from Unit 9 were still with him. They, of course, were not. He rushed
back and snatched the hand of Mike. “Delilah. We need to go.” Tom said. It
seemed silly, to be saying that in the current context. But, hey. Sometimes you
have to state the obvious.
Walking through the door, Tom made
sure the other two had actually gotten past the threshold before slamming the
doors shut. Turning, he saw that the doctor had already proceeded, and was
several feet away. “Hey, doc! These doors going to stay locked?” Tom yelled.
The emergency alarm did not seem as
terrible here. The floor was tiled, and several hallways branched out from the
main one here. A large control room loomed overhead here, similar to the one
he’d observed in Unit 9. Tom shrugged, not wanting to wait around to find out
the answer through trial-and-error. Marching forward, he caught up with
Octavio. “At some point, you’re going to have to give me some answers.” Tom
said, out of breath.
The doctor laughed.
A noise. A noise broke through the
barriers of his senses and caught Tom’s attention. He slowed down and began
looking around. Glancing upwards, he noticed a vague dark silhouette standing
in the control tower above, obscured and protected by the thick and blackened
glass. “Doc. Hey, doc!” Tom pointed at the shape when Octavio turned back.
“Hurry up!” the doctor yelled.
“They might use the gas soon.” he said.
“CODE Z. ALL AVAILABLE PERSONNEL.
WE HAVE A BREACH. SECURE YOUR STATIONS AND PREPARE FOR EVACTUATION. CODE Z. ALL
AVAILABLE PERSONNEL. WE HAVE A BREACH. SECURE YOUR STATIONS AND PREPARE FOR
EVACTUATION. CODE Z. ALL AVAILABLE PERSONNEL. WE HAVE A BREACH…”
“Securing their stations means
killing you guys for not being in your station.” Octavio said. He rushed up and
elbowed Tom.
“But, if we were IN our stations, we’d
die.” Tom reflected.
“Exactly.” Octavio said.
Chapter 3
Tom stabbed a guard dog.
As Octavio once again struggled and
scrabbled for an elusive key, Tom panicked. He smelled the fear. He imagined he
could even taste it. Sour, stale, vaguely redolent of hot onions and expired
cat food, the stench of desperation and despoiled dreams seemed to infect his
mind with a dangerous virus. Degeneracy reigned in this pseudo-asylum. And it
was about to devour him. Tom sensed it closing in. His chest was tight and it
felt hard to breathe.
In the midst of this, Octavio
tossed him a knife.
Tom took a moment to escape from
the macabre reverie to ponder the man’s seemingly endless capacity to retrieve
weapons like some supervillain in a cheesy made-for-cable-t.v. production. The
swarthy man wore jeans and a lab coat. How the hell did he have knives and
guns… and how had he managed to smuggle all of that into a prison. Tom just wished the man could find a fucking key for
once. Then maybe they wouldn’t need to shoot or stab anything.
Almost as if according to some
fucked-up script, Tom heard a noise. He held the long, serrated blade by the
black leather handle, his arms trembling. He tried to summon the courage and
rage he’d felt not long ago. The vortex of swirling madness that had impelled
him to craft weapons from the very bodies of others, the distinct thing that
had driven him to cold-blooded murder. But it seemed that he did not possess
such an in-dwelt capacity for brute violence.
If he were to describe what he
felt, it was tired. Tom didn’t want to be here. He didn’t want any of this.
Yet, his mind registered the
reality that he was here. And the
sound he’d heard: a door popping open.
Through that door emerged a large
mottled canine, its incisors on full display as it barreled forward.
Tom saw the thick strands of
saliva. His mind captured the snarl in slow motion. The nefarious creatures
long pink tongue flapped with each step. A German Shepherd, the bristly brown
fur stood at attention as it raced forward. He thought he heard it bark, but he
couldn’t be sure.
The canine lunged. Tom watched it.
He experienced an odd sense of disassociation. He seemed to hover his own body
and look down from above.
He saw himself thrust the knife he
held forward. Tom’s other, disembodied self observed the dog falling.
Blood spurted from the beast. Tom
shook. He went into violent paroxysms, his body controlled by the quaking and
the blind anxiety that pulsed inside of him. He felt it. He felt the moment
when he returned from the weird out-of-body experience.
And he dropped the knife to the
floor.
Then he began to cry.
Chapter 4
Fresh
air.
A blast
of fresh, unfiltered air punched him in the face. The effect was so strong, it
threatened to knock Tom off of his feet. It had been so long since he’d
breathed in oxygen that had not been re-circulated. He greedily sucked in,
turning to face the breeze.
It took a
moment for Tom, the former El Paso Gazette reporter, to register that the
doctor stood in the open doorway, motioning for him to proceed. Tom blinked. He
looked around, suddenly overwhelmed by the force and fury of his fatigue. The
desire to fade into a deep sleep felt powerful. He resisted it. He looked down,
nodding to himself. He saw that somehow, during the process of stabbing a
canine and the subsequent emotional tsunami, he had re-gained the hand of his
seemingly brain-dead companion. Delilah stood there, swaying slightly, her
mouth open, a thin trickle of saliva appearing there.
“Come on,
D.” Tom said. It was the first time he’d ever shortened her name in this way.
It felt… refreshing. To do so. He could not communicate why he experienced that
sensation of calm comfort at such a trivial thing, but he did. And perhaps it
was good that he had, for the brief glimpse into a life that was gave him hope
for a life that could be.
Gripping
a littler harder, he began guiding Mike the painter towards the door. The fresh
air smelled wonderful. A hint of summer whispered to him.
Tom saw a
tall silver gate outside. Heavy rows of barbed wire offered a glimpse of their
menacing miens as they coiled around and off into the distance. The sum glinted
off the metal. A large green boxy guardhouse sat next to the first gate. As he
noticed the building there, he registered that there were actually two gates
there. He wondered how they were supposed to get through both.
“Come
on.” Octavio said. He began marching forward.
Something
moved inside the guardhouse. Tom wanted to stop and enjoy the breeze. The
clarion call of the sirens seemed diluted out here; the silence was a beautiful
melody that he wanted to savor. The respite from the angry howls of the
machine-generated screeching just a few feet behind felt wonderful. But, he
reminded himself of how dire the circumstances were. Tom glanced back at
Delilah to make sure she’d followed along. He saw that the door to the prison
remained open.
The sunshine seemed incredibly
brilliant, and it hurt his eyes. He bent his head to avoid the martinet’s stare
of the hectoring sun. But, he kept going. He saw that the movement inside of
the guardhouse came from a human. Or some sort of creature. Tom wasn’t sure what
was what, after all he’d seen in the living nightmare he’d been forced to
endure over the last few… hours? Days? The concept of time seemed abstract and
distant.
Catching up with Dr. Octavio, Tom
kept his eyes fixed on the small structure guarding their escape route. Two
small windows faced the pathway their small cohort used to approach the exit.
The structure, which appeared to be made of bricks that had been painted green,
sat behind and a few feet away from the gates. A small space existed between the
two fences. Littered with rocks and dirt, Tom saw that where the fence curved
around, there were rows of barbed wire in between the fences, as well.
He briefly wondered where the dog
had come from.
A fat man with a large belly and dark
yellow sweat stains at the arm pits of his brown short-sleeved shirt emerged
from the tiny building. He wore black glasses. A short growth of coarse black
stubble dotted his ruddy cheeks. He gripped a pump shotgun with two hands.
The officer pointed it at them.
“Hey, no need for that Dave.”
Doctor Octavio said. He put his hands up, palms facing outwards, in the
universal gesture of non-aggression.
“Orders are that no one leaves.”
The officer said. He wore a gold-plated name badge at a jaunty angle on the
right side of his chest. His hands did not shake.
Tom looked at the man. The sight of
him seemed vaguely familiar, though he could not pin exactly why that was. He
felt strongly that he had encountered this man at some point before. The rotund
correctional officer had thin, slicked-back black hair that sat a ways back on
his head. Brown liver spots marred his flabby face, as well as what appeared to
be deep pock marks left over from a particularly bad case of adolescent acne.
“You can come with us.” Octavio
said. The doctor kept his voice level, calm. He kept moving forward, though
he’d slowed his approach to a near-crawl, making each footstep drawn-out and
deliberate.
“No, I can’t. I have orders.” The
officer said.
“Dave…”
“Officer David Work.”
“Dave, come on. Be reasonable.”
Octavio said.
“I have orders, Doc.” Dale said. He
waved the gun in the general direction of Tom and his two companions. “What’s
up with them? They were…” the man gulped. “They were in there?” he asked.
Officer David Work shook his head. “No. No. Doc, I can’t let them through.”
“Okay. Okay, Dave. I’ll send them
back inside. But, just open the first gate. Okay?” Octavio said.
“I can’t.” the officer stated. But
he sounded hesitant, uncertain.
“If we’re going to be formal and
use our titles, then you have to call me Major
Octavio Ramirez. I need to get to Fort Sam Houston, Dave.” Octavio said.
“Look around you. What do you see? What do you hear? Where’s your guard dog?”
he asked.
“I don’t know. I sent it in after
you.” Dave said.
“Yeah. And the zombies got it,
Dave. Come on, put the gun down.” Octavio said.
“I have orders.”
“Do you think these patients just
got this far because everyone is inside, running an orderly show? Unit 9 has
been breached. The zombies are out. I’m trying to get to the Army Medical
Command to stop this from spreading.” Octavio said.
“I. have. orders.” Officer David
Work said.
“The Captain is dead. The Warden is
dead.” Octavio said.
“You’ll send those…” the officer
nodded in their direction. His distaste and disregard for Tom and his friends
was written plainly on his face.
“I’ll send them back inside. I just
need you to open this gate so we can talk. You don’t need to open the second
gate. Just this one.” Octavio said.
“Al…alright. I’ll do it. But, I
can’t let you take them out there. They’re infected. They have to be.” he said.
Fumbling
with his keys, the large officer finally managed to unlock the small rusted
padlock to get back to the guardhouse. After several moments, the front gate
began to whirr. It shook a bit before moving lethargically along.
Tom
jumped.
Behind
him, he heard a crash. He turned around, but everything seemed fine. Nothing
looked out of the ordinary. At least, under the circumstances.
Octavio
went through the gap. Tom rushed to follow. Mike didn’t immediately move to
follow, and Tom was jerked back when he started forward. Grunting, he pulled on
the painter’s arm and proceeded. “Come on, Delilah.” he said.
Turning
back, he widened his eyes. “Oh, fuck.” Tom said.
Trying to
signal the doctor, he pivoted, and almost burst out laughing. The fat officer
lay face-down on the pavement. Octavio was bent down, going through his pockets
and keys. “Hey, doc. We have company.” Tom said.
Octavio
glanced up, nodded, then returned to his search. He found the keys and
thankfully got the small door leading to the guardhouse open relatively
quickly.
Tom felt
relieved about that. After a series of bumbling exits, it seemed like now was the
time for a little more urgency.
The sun
shone brightly. The breeze mitigated the intense heat of the summer’s day. Tom
looked up at the American flag flapping lightly under the wind. Next to it, he
could see the blue square and single white star of the Texas state flag
fluttering. The second gate began whirring open.
Tom
didn’t wait for the doctor. “Delilah!” he said, making his voice stern and stentorian
as he yanked on Mike’s arm. He didn’t want to hurt the guy, but he had to
boogey.
He heard
the snarls of the creatures rapidly approaching. They were the red-eyed ones.
Walking on all fours like bizarre quadrupeds, they raced towards the gate. Octavio
squeezed through the second gate even as it was shaking and reversing its
course. Tom felt unable to turn away. He stood just outside the second gates,
looking through the diamond-shaped metal units of the fence. The pale blonde
zombies bumbled forward, their backs arched and their heads down low to the
ground.
Tom
blinked. He startled. The sound of the second gate jarring closed jarred him.
He
stared. He couldn’t help it. He felt unable to resist.
He stared
as the quadrupedal creatures, once human, entered the small space between the
first and second gates and began consuming the guard who lay unconscious on the
ground.
Chapter 5
They
snarled.
They
snarled as they tore into the officer’s flesh. The sharp, angry sound of bones
snapping mixed itself into the evil vortex of macabre sounds. Tom stared. He
felt transfixed. He wanted to look away. His stomach churned and his body felt
weak, unsteady. There were five of them. They huddled around the fallen guard,
dipping their heads down to bite, often twisting their heads as they fought to
rip meat off of the corpse.
Shreds of brown fabric flew into the air with bits of
hair and flesh. A mist of red would occasionally erupt as the creatures
frantically fed. They moved around as they ate, almost in a coordinated
fashion. Tom never heard them talking. They just seemed to walk, on all fours,
in a counter-clockwise garish assembly line from Hell. The only noise they made
was the guttural growl-like sounds that seemed both simultaneously happy and
predatory.
One of them looked up at him.
The movement was so sudden, Tom had no time to look
away. His heart raced.
He stared into the deep red eyes of a zombie. The
creature was emaciated. Long and thin, with a wan baby face and purplish bags
under its eyes, the blonde-haired lab-created monster appeared to be male. If
there were such a thing as a leader of the pack- and that’s how Tom saw them-
then this one was it. A dangerous, howling, palpable rage emanated from the
lingering gaze of the creature.
The feeling of anger and hate ran its clammy hands over
his body. It stopped on his throat, closing slowly, wanting to him tremble in
the agonized anticipation of a long, slow death. The zombie wanted to torture
him with its gaze.
Tom jumped. He screamed.
Something pulled him.
Flailing, Tom pivoted, ready to fight. But, he blinked
and began breathing. He smiled. Nervous laughter escaped his lips. “Sorry.” Tom
muttered. He ran his sweaty hands over his dirty, blood-stained jumpsuit. He
looked at Octavio.
Octavio nodded. “We have to go.” he said.
And then he resumed his forward march. Octavio brushed
past Delilah, whom remained ambulatory, but vacant. Mike was still worthless.
Tom wondered again if it were even worth it to bring him along. But, he grabbed
Mike’s hand and followed the doctor. He resisted the urge to look back.
“Where are we going?” Tom called out.
“To the parking lot. Or, would you prefer to walk to
San Antonio?” Octavio asked.
“San Antonio?” Tom asked. He was breathing heavily. The
adrenaline rush of the past hour or so still tingled through his body, and he
felt tired again. But, he kept moving, his bare feet crunching with each foot
on the hard brown parched earth. The ground seemed vaguely hot, but Tom wasn’t
totally sure if his mind weren’t just playing tricks on him to try to get him
to slow down. He was aware of the sound of the flags flapping in the light
breeze.
“Yes, San Antonio.” Octavio said. He quickened his pace
as he entered the parking lot. He paused at the edge, looking around, head
moving from side to side. He grunted, turned slightly, and began walking again.
There weren’t many cars in the lot. It appeared almost empty. Many of the
vehicles that were present were trucks and sports utility vehicles.
Tom noticed a dearth of bumper stickers on the cars he
passed. For some reason, that struck him as significant. He licked his cracked
lips, suddenly aware of an intense thirst.
A drone hovered overhead. Tom first caught the motion
out of the corner of his eye. The small black speck wavered in the sky, an
unobtrusive witness. Putting a hand up to shield his eyes, Tom looked upward.
“Hey, doc.” he said.
Octavio turned, a scowl mangling his mien, contorting
it into an ugly picture of martial anger. He followed Tom’s finger, and his
expression transformed in an instant. His frown became pensive. Then his eyes
focused and he snapped his fingers. “Hurry.” he said.
“It’s almost like that’s the only word of English he
knows.” Tom muttered.
“I heard that. Car’s up here.” Octavio said. He’d
broken into a trot. He stopped at a dark green Ford Escape. Reaching into his
pocket, he emerged with a small oblong fob and pointed it at the vehicle. The
back lights flashed. Octavio swung open the driver’s side door, and stepped in.
Tom experienced a moment of panic. He looked at the
car. His heart again did its tribal war dance in his chest. He envisioned the
doctor hurrying off, escaping, just leaving them there to face the hideous
horde.
Chapter 6
They
escaped.
Or did
they?
Tom
wondered that as he sat in the back seat, watching the shaking brown hands of
the doctor as they gripped the wheel. He noticed a golden ring on one finger,
and wondered how such a man could have a wife. He tried to think about that,
but his mind felt weak and weary now that he’d finally been given an
opportunity to rest for a minute. Leaning against the tinted window, he idly
watched the tediously long countryside as it sped past.
An
almond-like odor, vaguely nutty emanated from Delilah’s arm. The proximity to her
in addition to the closed-off air, exacerbated the sensation the odor induced.
Tom tried to keep himself form breathing through his nose as he sat there,
staring blankly out into the distance. Octavio hummed to himself lightly as he
drummed his long thing fingers on the steering wheel. The fact that the evil
doctor could hum at a moment like this almost resurrected the dark laughter
that now was almost his only sentient friend.
“You’re
going to blow something up at Fort Sam Houston?” Tom asked. He looked upwards.
He spoke partly because the idea of the man humming seemed offensive to him.
“That’s
the plan.” Octavio said.
“So,
you’re a major?” Tom asked.
“What’s
with all of the questions?” Octavio asked, smirking as he glanced back to look
at his interlocutor.
“I’m
trying not to focus on the fetid limb of my traveling companion. And, you know,
the fucking zombies.” Tom laughed, a cold, cynical laugh without mirth that
seemed to linger in the air like a stale fart. “I did just wake up to a buffet
of human flesh.”
“Pseudomonas.”
Octavio said.
Tom
raised one eyebrow. “Wait, what?” he asked. He licked his lips. The car jumped,
and the movement jolted something in his stomach. He fought the urge to vomit.
“Oh.”
Octavio chuckled. “Sorry about that. I used to work with a lot of wounds.
Pseudomonas is one of the bacteria that often exudes an almond-like scent.”
“Scent.” Tom remarked wryly. He chuckled.
“More like odor.” Tom looked outside. He saw more houses now. The monotony of
the vast landscape of seemingly endless pasture land was now disrupted by the
occasional house. “We must be getting closer to town.” he said.
“Yeah.”
Octavio said.
“So, back
to the whole zombie apocalypse thing.” Tom said.
“Do you
have someplace to go? Once we get to San Antonio?” the doctor asked.
Tom
reflected on that for a moment. He didn’t have a ready answer. He bit his lower
lip. The man’s ability to avoid reality was unnerving. But, maybe that was a
great coping mechanism. At some point, Tom had to get back to the dirty
business of trying to survive in a world that had already left him for dead
once. “Will there be anyplace to go to? Will it be worth it?” he asked.
Then a
thought struck him. “Hey, are you going to help me with these guys?” Tom asked.
“That’s a
lot of questions to unpack. You’re pretty good at this. You must have been
fairly good at your job. You answer questions with your own, and you’re tenacious
as hell.” Octavio said.
Tom
huffed. He gazed out the window. A buzzard, or at least he thought it was a buzzard,
perched on a telephone wire. Perhaps there was a metaphor there, but he felt
too fatigued to care.
“Okay.
Okay. Yes, I can help you with your friends. I think. It should just be a
matter of a few pills and some nourishment for your one friend. The gal, well,
that might require a little more TLC. But, it seems you two have the hots for
each other so that shouldn’t be much of a problem.” Octavio said. He cleared
his throat. He slowed the car down.
Tom
tensed. He looked around. He didn’t see a stop sign out front, and his mind
immediately began to race with a thousand unwanted thoughts. But the vehicle
began moving almost as quickly as it had paused, and the cause for alarm seemed
to subside.
“I can’t
tell you whether it would be ‘worth it.’ That’s something you’ll have to
decide. If you’re alive, there is always someplace to go, though I’ve found, at
least in my own experiences, that it matters much more what you do when you
actually get there. But, there are plenty of people who are focused on the
journey. As if they are immersed with traveling instead of reaching some sort
of goal.” Octavio smiled. “I’m very cerebral at times. Gives me a bit of a…
disconnect, sometimes. You know, with humanity? Yeah. It can be difficult, when
you’re intelligent. To really grasp the human element. To empathize.”
“You
sound like a fucking sociopath.” Tom said.
“Well,
that’s because I am one. The Army tends to help that process along.” Octavio
chuckled. “No, that’s not totally fair. I was one long before the Army.” he
said. “I need gas. You hungry? You should probably get some real food,
something to drink.”
Tom
laughed. “Sure thing, doc. Just give me a healthy dose of chicken.” Tom looked
out the window. He saw a truck stop in the distance. “Don’t you want to know what
it tastes like?” he asked.
A curious
silence filled the capacious interior of the vehicle as the progressed towards
the fuel station.
Octavio
pulled up and got out, pumping the gas as if he didn’t really care if Tom
escaped. Returning briefly to the car, he bent inside and reached across to the
passenger side to push open the glove compartment. His wallet, a bulging black
leather thing, had been stored in there all along. Octavio resumed his annoying
humming as he retreated, heading towards the transparent glass door. We love
the Mustangs was stenciled in pink and blue glitter paint on one of the large
windows, with a frosted football helmet and a logo of a horse on either side of
it. Behind the window, a fat woman wearing a blue apron with hennaed hair idly
chewed hum and watched Octavio as he cruised through the aisles.
Tom
figured the Mustangs were a local high school team. He felt curious about them.
Was the quarterback some coddled stud who would inevitably find his way onto a
major team, where his life would continue to be handed to him by a flock of
adoring predators all driven by their lust for every last red cent they could
extract from his body? Tom pondered the cryptic and evasive non-answers of the
evil doctor who’d spared him for some reason.
He
wondered what that quarterback, what those Mustangs would do when the
apocalypse came roaring onto their doorstep.
Lost in
thoughts of hubris and aggression, guns and guts and glory, Tom didn’t see
Octavio returning. He blinked and jumped when the car door slammed shut. He
found a large white plastic container being thrust at him, perspiration sliding
down in thick beads on the side.
“Big
Sip?” Octavio asked.
“When are
you going to start answering my fucking questions?” Tom asked. He looked at the
thin red line on the edge of the plastic straw for a few seconds, hesitating.
Then he took a sip. He squeezed his face into a sour moue, he stuck his tongue
out.
Octavio
glanced back in the rearview mirror at just that moment, and laughed out loud.
“It’s not
funny.” Tom said, wiping the back of one hand over his mouth. “It was way too
sweet.” he said.
“It might
take some time.” Octavio said. He put the vehicle into gear and began moving
back towards the highway.
Several trucks lined a narrow strip
next to a large lot overgrown with wild grasses. Tom couldn’t help but reflect
on the world moving around him. He seemed to see it differently now. “Is there
going to be any? Time? Will there even be soda? What the fuck is happening?” Tom asked.
The car stopped suddenly. Tom’s
head jolted back and bounced off of the faux leather headrest. Octavio had an
angry glint in his eyes. Tom felt his body growing warmer. His heart slammed
its foot onto the gas pedal, and a trickle of sweat seemed to form instantaneously
under his arms. He watched the doctor as he tensed his jaw muscles and gripped
the steering wheel so hard his knuckles blanched.
“Tomorrow, I plan on blowing up a
secret laboratory in the Army Medical Command building. That lab contains a
particularly virulent strain of the rabies virus which can be transmitted by
air. That lab also contains large quantities of scopolamine, tetrodotoxin, and
alpha-PVP. Among other things. Normally, some of that stuff would be strictly
contained in a much more secure environment in the labs in Maryland, but we’ve
been doing tests…”
“What about all of the people who
were cut in half? The people chained to the walls?” Tom asked. He felt somehow
distant, separated from the conversation. His body shuddered, and he felt as if
he might begin convulsing at any moment. The screams. The blood.
It was hard to erase the indelible
horror from his mind.
“You were on a unit where the main
goal was to test a modified version of tetrodotoxin. Normally, you would have
been transferred to Unit 7, but… instead, here we are. Potentially drawing
attention to ourselves.” Octavio said.
“That… doesn’t explain anything.”
Tom said.
“Look, we really do need to get
moving. Day after tomorrow, a few million people could be infected with rabies
within a few days, maybe even hours. Very few of them will know it, because the
symptoms don’t show up immediately- though this is an aggressive form, so it’s
probably be around 9 days. Many will certainly fall prey to a high from
alpha-PVP, and that should happen quickly. The people closest to the blast will
be impacted the most. Have you ever been to San Antonio?” Octavio asked. He turned
and looked at Tom.
Tom could only shake his head. He
felt trapped in a fugue state.
Should he try to stop the man?
Why would he want to?
“Fort Sam Houston is very close to
a number of populated areas, not to mention military bases. A concert is happening
nearby at an arena tomorrow. People will be at the zoo. So, around a hundred
thousand people, many of them active-duty military personnel with access to
some of the most devastating weaponry known to man, will suddenly devolve into
an insatiable rage. That’s what is probably going to happen tomorrow.” Octavio
said.
“But…that’s it? Why risk breaking
me out of prison, or whatever… that was?”
Tom asked.
“I’m still experimenting, if I’m
honest. I probably won’t get to observe the results. But… in some ways, I
admire you. I don’t care much about your friends. You have something… something
encoded in your very genetic makeup that makes you… different. The “tet
offensive,” that’s what the guards called it, had morphed into a study to find
what made people resistant to our new strains. One in a thousand would
eventually emerge from the cocoon of their paralysis, and we estimated it to
around one in a million who would actually survive to walk and function
somewhat normally again.”
They remained stalled in the middle
of the short, winding road that led back to the freeway. No one was waiting
behind them, so it didn’t seem to be much of an issue, though if the goal were
to remain circumspect, it didn’t seem like sitting here, in the middle of a
road, would be the way to achieve it. Tom looked out at the sky, noting the few
puffy white clouds that sauntered by. It was getting darker. He could see the
moon’s silver silhouette.
“What would have normally happened?
And why cut people in half?” Tom asked. He felt confused. He blinked his eyes
hard rapidly. Inserting the straw into his mouth, he took a nervous sip.
“Vivisections. Yes. Well, I can understand
why the sight of… such things would be troubling. No one, none of the patients
or the general public, was ever intended to see such things.” Octavio said, his
voice hollow as it trailed off. He put the car back into gear and started
driving again.
“So, what happened to all of the
anomalies. What was Unit 7?” Tom asked.
“Do you remember the zombie who ate
the guard?” Octavio asked.
Tom shuddered. He took another sip.
His mouth suddenly seemed parched. He nodded, a knot forming in his throat. It
felt as if a bull mastiff had decided to take a nap on his chest. It was hard
to breath.
The traumatic memory flowed into
his consciousness like thick, molten lava. It seared every synapse it came into
contact with as it oozed into the forefront of his brain. It hurt, physically
hurt, to remember. He saw the quadrupedal creatures ravenously feasting on the
overweight brown-shirted guard. He heard the macabre melody of their gnashing
teeth and smelled the breeze as it traipsed by, seemingly oblivious to the rank
horror and defilement occurring under its nose.
“Unit 7 involved a lot of things.
We had been at Kenedy for around fifteen years, after it got transferred to
private ownership. Started out as a noble plan to run tests on sex offenders,
find out what makes them tick, if there are genetic markers, et cetera. I
wasn’t there then, of course. After a while, we got into aggression. Scientists
wanted to study aggression, particularly female aggression, though we were
looking at violence in males, too. Lots of stuff. Anyway, Unit 7 had always
been the mind control unit.” Octavio said.
This lecture was starting to bore
Tom, but he listened on anyway. He leaned his head back against the window and
looked out.
“You would have been transferred to
Unit 7. Unit 7… is for the elites. There were only two patients who ever
survived Unit 9, to my knowledge, and they ended up there. We train them to
become the monsters we can’t allow ourselves to become.”
“Why? How?” Tom asked. He scratched
his temple.
“Nanobots, computer chips,
subliminal messaging, psychological conditioning, narcotics. It’s pretty
intense for the first year of so. Why? Because people are motivated by fear,
Thomas. Because sometimes doing horrible things can actually be for the greater
good.”
Chapter 7
Tom
pondered the practical benefits of evil.
Octavio
was humming again. Tom tried to ignore it, but occasionally the sound would
begin bothering him anew. There wasn’t anything he could do about it, so he
merely forced his mind to wander to other things. Outside of the vehicle, the
grasslands again dominated the landscape. Endless vistas seemed to lead to the
edge of the earth. Sometimes there’d be a smattering of trees, but the
countryside appeared to be nothing more than grass. Mostly brown, but often
green.
Off in
the distance, he spied a lake. Or some sort of body of water. Tom tried to
focus on that, to visualize happy people sitting at the water’s edge, shoes
off, laughing as they held perspiring glass bottles of beer and shared stories
of simpler times. It felt wrong. Deep down, Tom knew he’d been corrupted.
Fundamentally altered. An evil existed inside of him, gnawing at him, begging
to be made manifest for the world to see. The El Paso Gazette had stolen his
innocence, and the detached doctor had purloined his morality.
He could
never again casually sit by the placid water and reminisce.
Tom
realized something, as he listened to the obnoxious sound of Octavio humming
and the steady drone of the Ford’s engine as it rolled through the unmitigated
flatness of the south Texas terrain. It was a profound epiphany. And it had
almost been gifted to him by the nefarious medical practitioner who’d both
wounded him and saved him. He realized as he sat in the car that he had to
harness that evil that was festering inside of him.
By
embracing it, he could rid the world of those who would operate under the guise
of civility, only to gradually undermine it. He could harness it to motivate
him, to empower him. Tom hated that he loved the simplicity of it all.
It felt
as if something he’d been struggling with internally for so long had just been
reconciled.
For many
years, he’d dedicated himself to reporting the truth. He’d taken his mission as
a journalist seriously. Seeing it as a vocation rather than a job, he had
departed college with the sense of profundity and purpose that had been
carefully inculcated into him. But, over time, the rampant, rank cynicism and
cronyism had caused a dichotomy. He’d wanted for so long to speak out. But,
aside from practical concerns, he’d… held out hope for change. He’d been
chasing a mirage.
Only an
evil far greater could defeat the rot that had infected society.
Tom
nodded to himself. He smiled. And for the first time since fleeing Unit 9, he
relaxed.
He fell
asleep.
He jumped.
Moving his head violently back and forth, he trembled. He looked around, trying
to find the threat. A thick, wet wad of saliva slid down his cheek. Tom’s mouth
felt dry.
Octavio
stood over him. The door was open. A sultry breeze circulated through the
interior of the car, flowing over and past Tom.
“What the
fuck, man?” Tom asked.
“I need
you to get in the back. We need to hide you.” Octavio said.
Tom
looked past the doctor. He saw more flat earth and some trees. The sun pummeled
his eyes when he glanced at the sky. He blinked. “What are you talking about? I
was finally asleep.” he muttered.
His
stomach growled. Tom felt queasy. He suddenly felt a violent urge to vomit.
Something
in his coloration or demeanor must have caught the doctor’s attention, because
Octavio grabbed Tom and helped him out of the vehicle. There was a slight drop
off, since the sports utility vehicle was a bit off of the ground. Tom stumbled
and fought to find his footing.
Once out
of the car, Tom vomited. A thick, yellowish-brown chunky liquid flowed out of
his mouth. Before he’d even bent over, the emesis overcame him. The stuff
appeared to have the consistency of a sick thick gravy. It smelled like what a
vulture’s guts would taste like. The flavor of the rank retching induced a
fresh wave of barfing.
Tears
came into his eyes. He shook. Tom honestly thought in that moment that he might
die.
The
doctor wiped Tom’s face with a silken white handkerchief.
When Tom
looked up, leaning on the evil doctor’s arm, thick vile bile staining his
shirt, he saw something that made him want to cry. He felt the disorienting
confusion once again. He laughed. For a few long moments, it was the hysterical
laughter that always held the potential to totally derail him.
“You…
are… a complex character.” Tom said. He felt a little better. He waved Octavio
away, and tried to stand on his own. After a few seconds of swaying but staying
upright without support, the doctor relaxed and gave Tom a few feet of space,
stepping back. The dry breeze wheezed as it stumbled past, a senile man on his
way to brunch.
“Why do
you need… to hide me?” He asked. He was short of breath. His chest felt tight.
Tom’s vision seemed to blur around the edges. He swayed, and his footing seemed
unstable. But, he remained upright. The fresh air and the sense of freedom that
accompanied this wide expanse of open terrain helped him remain on his feet. He
blinked repeatedly, and he felt his jaw muscles twitching involuntarily.
“For such
a smart man, you can be pretty dense sometimes.” Octavio said, chuckling. He
looked around, placing his hands in his pockets. He stood there for several
seconds, appearing as if he were about to unburden his soul of a dense and
depraved secret. When he again locked eyes with his fugitive interlocutor,
there was… something there. A glint, perhaps, of emotion. Real, raw emotion.
Maybe it could even be mistaken for compassion.
Tom was
the first to look away in their little game of eyeball chicken. Whatever it was
he saw, or thought he saw, hurt him. Or maybe it just awakened something inside
that he wanted to suppress. He felt a volatile mix of confusion and fear as he
again wanted to succumb to the mad laughter that seemed an apt metaphor for
everything he’d endured up to this point. Why it was manic mirth that would
help him escape the pain of a hectoring reality seemed a trivial point.
He took a
breath. Tom looked down at his feet. He scratched a lazy figure eight with the
point of one toe.
“We need
to hide you, Thomas, because your face was recently plastered all over the
news. Not just in Texas, but all over the country. A mass shooter, at an LGBT
art gallery, and you got away from the scene of the crime. Now, I’m not saying
you actually were the shooter. I’m
pretty sure you weren’t. But, people think you were. Perception can be reality.
So, Thomas. That’s why we need to hide you. Unless you want to go back to Unit
9. I’d imagine it’s not a terribly pleasant place at the moment.” Octavio said.
Tom
nodded. It made sense, at least. He flashed back briefly to the time when he’d
been cowering behind the bar with his two new friends. He smiled. He did laugh
then, and the mirth flowed over him, almost its own distinct, living entity. He
relished the sensation of surrendering control to something other than the
incredible pain.
After
maybe a minute of this, he calmed down. Tears glistened in his eyes. He reached
up and wiped at his face, blushing. He felt mild embarrassment at having
laughed like that. But, then he remembered all that the evil/good doctor had
seen. A little spontaneous laughter shouldn’t be noteworthy, in context.
“Okay.
O…okay. So, how are we going to do this?” he asked. “Don’t they have tight
security or something?” Tom wondered aloud.
“Sometimes.
When they need to. Why do they need to? Why in the world would an officer and a
respected member of the medical profession bring an escaped mass murderer onto
a military base?” Octavio asked, raising an eyebrow.
“Hopefully
you’ll tell me why it is you’re doing this.” Tom said. “I kind of want to
know.” He muttered, moving towards the back of the vehicle.
Octavio
chuckled. “Yeah. So, we’ll just put you in the back. We’re about maybe twenty
minutes away. Pretty soon, we’ll start hitting some heavier traffic. Just lay
down, put the blanket over you. I’m going to stop at a store, get some supplies
and put them on top and around you.” he said.
“Why
wouldn’t I just get out and run away?” Tom asked. He blinked. He couldn’t
really believe he’d actually uttered the words.
Octavio
shifted his weight. A hard, ugly look flashed in his eyes. But it subsided so
quickly, it might have been a mere figment of one’s imagination. “Where would
you go?” he asked. Octavio smiled. “Look, we do need to hurry. We can talk more
this evening. You won’t just run because you can’t. You’ve got two friends who
need your help. You’re sick. You really want
to know who or what I am. You want revenge. I don’t know against whom, or why.
I doubt you’d tell me. But, I can see it. I heard it.” he said.
“You
heard it?” Tom asked.
“We
watched you. You fell into a prolonged and acute delirium that lasted over 47
days. You would wake up, make small movements, then seemingly fall back asleep.
But, if I waited, after you’d appeared to have fallen into the darkness, I
could listen to you mumbling. You repeated the word Johnson many times.”
Tom
winced. Johnson.
Chapter 8
He
relived his rape.
Tom
shuddered. He felt himself go pale. He felt weak, and he leaned against the
side of the vehicle with one arm. His stomach threatened to induce a fresh wave
of emesis as the fear and adrenaline collided in his gut.
The need
for revenge swirled in the cauldron of his soul. Its noisome vapors rose up and
tainted his being. The noxious, toxic potion consumed him as he trembled. Rage
and anticipation tingled through him, pulsing as it flowed freely in his veins.
He stirred the witch’s brew.
Taking
several deep breaths, he recovered. He stood. Looking past Octavio, he stared
at the cerulean heavens as they stretched out towards the horizon. A few puffy
clouds sauntered through the celestial promenade. He could see the moon in the
daytime sky. For some reason, that fact made him smile.
“What?”
Octavio asked. His voice was gentle.
“Nothing.
Let’s get this over with.” Tom said.
He got into
the back. The area was quite roomy. A large, thick black mat with a fuzzy
surface rested on the floor, and Tom laid down. He curled his legs in and
assumed what was almost a fetal position. He grunted when his legs scraped
something sharp that jutted from the floorboards.
“You
comfortable?” Octavio asked.
Tom
chuckled. “Do I look comfortable?” he asked.
Octavio
stared at Tom for a long second, then smiled and shook his head. He reached up
and slammed the door shut.
Tom
jumped at the loud report of the hatch slamming.
He felt
acutely aware of the silence. He waited for the car to start. It seemed like it
was taking forever. Tom wanted to get up, to peek out through the oblong tinted
rear window to see just what it was that the complex doctor was doing. As he
sat there, fear and anxiety again renewed their vigorous assault on his
insides.
He tried
to think. He heard footsteps, and then Octavio got into the car. They sat for a
few minutes without moving. Tom’s mind raced, a thousand thousand dueling thoughts
competing for his finite attention. It seemed tight and closed-off, down here
on the floor of a Ford Escape that belonged to a fucking human rights violator.
Tom
attempted to fathom his fate. It seemed odd, that the world he’d inhabited for
so many decades had been reduced to this small, ignominious space. All of his
life, he’d dedicated himself to truth and intellectual freedom, and he was not
trapped in the back of an evil doctor’s vehicle, waiting to be complicit in
mass murder, consumed by an indelible rage, a fugitive who could barely discern
truth from lies, fiction from reality.
He heard
the car start. Tom felt the large-ish vehicle lurch, then it began moving. He
idly wondered what the delay had been about. As the consistent mechanical humming
of the car’s forward momentum lulled him into a relaxed state, Tom immersed
himself in thought. He vaguely recalled something, but he wasn’t quite sure
what it was. It just seemed important. The thought was a gnat, and he swatted
at it. Something about a guy he’d met in jail…
Joker.
Tom
laughed. He remembered the man taking his potato chips after a dumb bet. The
former reporter used his keen observational skills and ability for recall to
draw a portrait in his mind of that time. It was hard to admit that a jail
intake unit could be considered simpler times. But, considering Tom had not
long ago stabbed a peace officer with a fibula and consumed someone’s flesh
meat for an undefined period of time, maybe sitting in jail on trumped-up
charges was an example of simpler times.
He
recalled the doctor asking him if he had anywhere to go. Octavio was going to
let him go. It seemed like that was the case, anyway. What the man said made
sense. Who would he go to? Who could he tell? Tom posed little threat to the
evil doctor. Yet, why just let Tom go? He couldn’t shake that eerie feeling
that there was something more to this unfolding drama. He always wanted to know
the full story. Perhaps it was that that had gotten him in this predicament to
begin with. Maybe it could even be considered a personality flaw.
Tom
chuckled. “If…” he whispered. His lips felt dry. They hit a bump in the road,
and Tom’s body lifted up. His leg scraped the sharp point again, and he winced.
“Fuck.” he said.
Reflecting
on things, he realized that maybe this could work out for the better. It was a
hell of a silver lining, considering the circumstances, but if he hadn’t been
put in this predicament, he would never have met Delilah. Or Mike. The savage
plans of Octavio probably would have unfolded regardless, and then Tom would
have just died a bitter, lonely, underpaid reporter who’d been turned into a
mouth whore for a disgusting fat pig of a boss.
The car
stopped. Tom tensed. He looked towards the door. He felt vulnerable. If someone
were to just open that door, he would be easy prey. Weakened by whatever
disease he’d been infected with or medical experiments he’d been subjected to,
he’d endured some interminable period of near-starvation and dehydration. His
legs were numb and he possessed nothing to defend himself with.
It
started back up.
Tom
perked up. He crawled a bit closer to the back and listened. He could hear
other cars. They were in traffic.
He tried
to get a grasp on time. How long had it been since they’d left the prison? He
honestly couldn’t say. It seemed like everything was a ghoulish blur in his
mind, an endless macabre montage on a slow march towards death.
Settling
down, he commanded his heart to be still and he focused his mind. It was hard
to do. He wanted to think about so many things. He felt the need to worry about
myriad things, but he realized so few of them were in his direct control. He
needed to just sit back and wait. To trust Octavio.
The
latter proved easier said than done. Every time the evil doctor did something
to make Tom want to trust him, he revealed some crazy detail, such as the fact
he watched him as he nearly died in a cell without making any effort to
intervene. It was a little hard to let down his guard with a man that was about
to turn a few million people into raving, murderous lunatics.
Tom went
back to one thing. The doctor had said he’d help cure them. He’d help ensure
their relative safety.
Octavio
hadn’t sugar-coated things. He’d shot it straight and told him bluntly that he
couldn’t really say what the future held. Which only forced Tom to want to go
off on another tangent, because, even now, after all he’d endured, he still
could just not comprehend why someone
would do something like this. There had to be some powerful underlying
motivation. Something was driving the doctor to do this.
And
something had driven him to save Tom.
Tom was
going to make it his personal mission to find out just what that something was.
Chapter 9
They
stopped.
Tom
groaned. He wanted to get up and get to. To stretch his tired, tingling limbs. Every
moment that passed reawakened a terrible fear of imprisonment. He felt trapped.
Vulnerable. He tried to make light of it as he trembled on the floor,
occasionally twitching or moving his body to try to keep some of the blood
flowing. The silence in the vehicle seemed deafening.
The car
shook when Octavio got out. Tom’s heart galloped through the verdant meadows of
his chest. If things had seemed bad before, he realized they felt worse now.
His only tangible relief from the exposed state he was in was the evil doctor.
And he had just left. Tom tried to breathe. He focused on the stale air as it
went into his lungs, then as it exited. The exercise proved somewhat calming.
“What the
fuck.” he muttered.
Tom
inched forward. He heard something outside, and he wanted to investigate. Some
sort of scratching noise. It came from somewhere close to the back of the S.U.V.
Tom could feel a dry, desiccated breeze as it wheezed in from underneath that
doors. He could see a glint of light through the crack at the bottom.
He heard
a woman’s voice. She seemed to be cooing. He chuckled. The sound had been a
woman wheeling her cart to a nearby vehicle, where she was unloading groceries
or whatever while distracting her child. A young one, from the sound of it.
Probably a newborn.
Imaging
this proximate pair of humans, Tom smiled. He could picture them there,
oblivious. Perhaps the mother was rushed. He assumed she was the mother, of
course. He saw the woman as mid-height, maybe 5’7” with long brown hair. He
could see her wearing leggings or jeans with holes at the knees. Golden
bangles? Tom nodded his head. That seemed to fit.
Hearing
the adjacent car start up, he felt a momentary sense of sadness. With them
gone, he could no longer play the game of guess-what-they-look-like. He
collapsed back into a sad and anxious anticipation. He wanted Octavio to hurry
up.
“Delilah.”
he said. “Delilah!”
Tom
grunted. He kicked the seat. He groaned when he received no audible response. A
solitary tear escaped from one corner of his eye. He felt it as it trailed down
his cheek. The silence was an angry pit bull that locked its jaws onto his
throat.
It
accused him.
Thinking
back, he tried to think if there were anything he could have done. Part of him
felt overwhelmed with a sense of guilt. I
am responsible, he thought. As the cavity that was the silence grew, he could
only think. And perhaps it was no wonder that most of his thoughts were
negative. Tom had brought these people, Delilah and Mike, into a world of
ineradicable pain and turmoil. They hadn’t chosen this.
Even
worse, it had probably been his phone which had led the police to Delilah’s
home. They’d been so close. They’d
just been talking about making a hasty retreat. Delilah’s father had all sorts
of money…
Tom
harkened back to that, and his heart skipped a beat. A smile broke out over his
face. He giggled. Something akin to hope blossomed inside of him.
He
jumped.
A key
jingled just outside the door. Something beeped. A loud POP burst through the
quiet. When the hatch opened, the light filtering past and around Octavio forced
Tom to blink.
“Lay down.”
Octavio said, obvious strain in his voice.
Tom
wanted to protest, but he did as he was told. He laid back, assuming the
near-fetal position as bags were piled on top of him. The weight of them hurt,
but he forced himself to not vocalize the pain. The door was slammed shut.
Within short order, Octavio was back in the driver’s seat and the vehicle was
moving again.
Tom heard
more traffic. Something from one of the bags oozed out. A gelatinous, cold
substance slid down his arm. He shivered. He smelled fried chicken. He hadn’t
been certain he could feel normal hunger again. He thought of the meat, and the
idea helped alleviate any nascent appetite that had been developing.
He idly
wondered if he could manage going vegan during the zombie apocalypse. Tom
laughed. The sound of the car progressing through traffic diluted the sound.
They
stopped and started more now. He could hear horns blaring. Sometimes the sounds
and reverberations of loud music assaulted him. Tom wondered if his senses were
heightened because of the relative lack of sight, or if things were just louder
in Texas. He didn’t remember anything like this in El Paso, per se. The Ford
Escape owned by the evil doctor turned.
When they
slowed way down to an almost crawl, Tom took note. He tensed. He guessed they
were at or near the base now. Tom tried to listen closer, to pick up any extra
clues. They stopped.
The sound of traffic was distant
now. The air even seemed to smell different, if that were possible. He sniffed.
Yes. There was a hint of… oil? He couldn’t quite say what it was, but the odor
displayed something distinctly different from what he’d encountered along the
way there. Maybe it was rain or some slight change in the weather, but for some
vague reason, Tom didn’t think so.
“Yes, sir. Major Octavio Ramirez.”
Tom listened. His body tightened.
He didn’t want to be the reason they got stopped or held up. Adrenaline pulsed
in his veins and he fought the urge to fidget. Nervous energy seemed to radiate
off of his skin and he gritted his teeth and did his best to eavesdrop.
“No, sir. They’re patients. I
actually just helped them get out of an abusive situation. I have their
identification in my house, I think.” Octavio said. He paused. “Yes. Yes, I
live here on base. Yes, you’ve seen me before.”
A pregnant silence ensued. “Uh, no,
no problem. She’s Raven Williams and he’s Dylan Thomas.” Octavio said.
“Yeah. That was my first thought,
too. It does sound kind of familiar.” Octavio said, chuckling.
Tom felt vulnerable. He had a hard
time catching his breath. He wanted out. He needed air. His body ached and his
mind felt as if it might implode at any minute under the pressure of his
anxiety. It seemed inevitable as the sunrise that the evil doctor would soon
pull out a gun and begin mindlessly firing into the bodies of the unfortunate
guards.
A tense pause filled the void, and
Tom idly wondered as he lay buried under a heap of groceries if this was how
he’d meet his end. He suppressed a laugh. If it were, then it was a funny way
to go. Tom felt amused.
After what seemed like several long
minutes, Tom heard muted mumbling, and then the car lurched as it began moving
forward. Their pace was considerably slower now. They took several turns, and
with each one, Tom felt his body pulled in a different direction. One of the
plastic bags disgorged its contents onto him. A can of cream of broccoli soup
rolled and bounced on its way into a corner. Tom stared at the silver aluminum
bottom of the can, watching it with some trepidation. If this were how he was
going to go, he didn’t want it to be with cheap calories stuck to his face.
He sighed. Tom realized with a
slight smile that there was little he could if that were in the cards. All he
could do is try to stay calm and get through this. Whatever this, in fact, was.
He still wasn’t fully sure if he
had all the details straight on that score.
They stopped.
Tom strained his neck looking up
with tense anticipation. He wanted to escape this backseat as badly as a
hyperactive Millennial wants to get out of a business meeting. Yet, just as
with those damned meetings, it seemed like something, someone just had to
prolong the thing. He waited. He began to sweat. He felt himself shaking. All
of his energy and focus in that moment seemed tied to his desire to get up and
moving. Perhaps it wasn’t unreasonable, under the circumstances. Given his
recent imprisonment, perhaps he should feel fear of being trapped and immobile
while in the trunk of a mad scientist’s vehicle.
The hatch opened. Fresh air
assaulted Tom’s senses. He blinked as he looked upward. The sky had grown
shades darker in the short time since he’d last seen it through the tinted
window. Tom gulped in air as if he’d been deprived of oxygen for some prolonged
period.
Octavio stood there, looking down
at him, a curious smile etched into his face. “Well, are you going to get up?”
he asked.
“Kind of hard, with all of this
crap on me.” Tom said.
Octavio laughed. “True enough.” he
said. He picked up a few bags, lacing his brown liver-spotted hands through the
white handles, the sound of the plastic rubbing together mildly offensive.
Turning, the mysterious madman walked up a short paved path to what appeared to
be his house. Or, at least the house where he stayed.
Tom watched the man’s back. He
noticed how Octavio walked. The man walked with a certain quiet confidence. For
some reason, that made Tom mad. How dare
he? he thought. He moved one arm, and felt it tingle. He realized he might
need help getting up and hobbling out of the car. He waited, gritting his
teeth, reflecting on the cruel irony that the escape he’d longed for so badly
was right in his face. Literally right in his face, and he could do nothing
about it.
Octavio returned. He was humming
again. He looked down and saw something in Tom’s face, for he took a step back
and began frowning. “What?” he asked, eyes wide.
Tom took a deep breath. “Can you
just please help me out of this car? I need to get some blood flowing.” he
said.
“You’re not going to go all psycho
on me, are you?” Octavio asked.
Tom laughed. He fought the urge to
collapse into the insensible hysteria. Perhaps that would be his only companion
on whatever journey lie ahead. The ugly and uncontrollable urge to laugh until
he nearly went blind. Tears formed at the edges of his eyes. He could feel the
moisture there. “No.” Tom said. He spoke simply, because it was all he could
say. Words eluded him in this bizarre moment.
As he felt himself pulled forward
by the surprising strength of the relatively thin doctor, he wondered again if
the man were clueless in some ways. Some sort of idiot savant. He tried to get
up on his own when the doctor let go, but he found he could not. He breathed
hard and tried again. Then again. Sighing, on the verge of tears, his lachrymal
glands working overtime to make up for all the years when they went unemployed,
Tom pled for help.
“Just lean on me, then.” Octavio
said. They walked slowly together, Tom limping and relying on the stabilizing
strength of his unusual traveling companion as he made his way into the home. A
large beige archway towered over the small cracked stone porch. The house
appeared almost as if it had been plucked from a history textbook’s photos of
an old colonial Catholic Mission.
Inside, Tom smelled cinnamon. It
was a faint but fragrant scent that seemed to linger in the air, offering some
sort of seductive promise. Octavio guided him wordlessly to a long black
leather couch and helped him down, then left without saying anything.
Tom sat there for several moments,
immersed in the surreal sense that this was the mad doctor’s home. An electric
fireplace sat under a tiled arch in one wall across the room. He looked at it,
intrigued. He idly wondered if it could heat a room as large as this. Tom
scratched his face, feeling the coarse stubble. He smiled. For some reason, the
presence of facial hair made him happy. He’d always avoided trying to grow a
beard because his hair always grew in in patches. His Apache side. Returning to
the fireplace, he considered it. It seemed so… out of place, in some weird way.
Here they were in South Texas, and the military man had a fireplace. The home
had to have heating.
Footsteps broke through his
reverie. Tom sat up on one elbow and looked towards the door. He winced. The
sudden movement hurt his shoulder. He slumped back down. He sighed. The couch
turned out to be quite comfortable. Then again, a sack of turtle turds would
probably be comfortable when compared to what he’d gone through just to get to
this point.
Octavio walked in, holding
Delilah’s good arm as he guided her towards a black leather recliner stationed
at an angle across from where Tom lay. He watched the doctor as he helped steer
her down into the seat. There was something inherently tender in his movements
that reassured Tom. He once again was struck by the dichotomies of this strange
savior. “You’re going to save them?” he asked. He blinked. When the words came
out, he was surprised to hear that his voice had gone hoarse. His throat hurt.
Tom coughed into a fist and looked away, avoiding the doctor’s stern gaze.
“Save? I don’t know. I think that
might be more of your job. Will I help them recover to something more
resembling normality? Yes, I hope to do that. It’s what I promised you, isn’t
it?” he asked, raising one eyebrow.
Tom chuckled. He couldn’t help it. “Doc,
I don’t know what’s real and what’s not, at this point.” he said.
Octavio patted him on the shoulder
in an avuncular way as he retreated back outside.
Peering at Delilah, he tried to
penetrate the fog of her trauma and paralysis. “Delilah.” he said. His smile
quickly turned into a frown when he saw that she didn’t respond. “How did we
get here?” he asked. Something about the quiet disturbed him. He was tired of
it. Maybe there was some part of the woman who sat across from him that could
understand… something. If not the words themselves, perhaps the tone. She was
in there, somewhere.
He had to believe that.
Scraping sounds. Tom turned again,
flexing his jaw muscles and gritting his teeth. He winced at the pain that shot
up his neck. What was that about? Seeing that the doctor was escorting the
painter into the residence, Tom relaxed. He rested his head on the edge of the
couch and closed his eyes. He felt tired. Profoundly tired. Weary would cover
it, if it encompassed feeling so utterly fatigued that he almost prayed for the
darkness to take him so he could fall into an eternal slumber.
Mike was dumped unceremoniously
into a wicker chair that rested near the decorative fireplace. Octavio stood,
stretching, hands on his hips, moving his torso from side to side. He took
several deep breaths, then walked towards the sitting area where Tom rested,
one eye open. On the way, Octavio slammed the front door.
The violent report of the door
colliding with the jamb caused Tom to startle. He sat up quickly, looking
around, eyes wide. He frowned when he saw Octavio smiling, looking at him from
his seat on the other recliner. “It’s not fucking funny.” Tom muttered.
“I didn’t say it was.” Octavio
said. “Would you like some tea?” he asked.
“I’d like to get the fuck out of
here.” Tom responded.
Chapter 10
“You’re
always free to go.” Octavio said.
“Am I?”
Tom asked. He chortled. Looking away, he smirked. His eyes strayed towards the
fireplace again. “Does it get cold in here? You don’t have heat?” he asked.
“I didn’t
design the place, Thomas. Yes, it can get cold, I suppose. Yes, we have heat.”
Octavio said.
“Where’s
your wife?” Tom asked.
“Always
so full of questions. I don’t know. Probably fucking some E-4.” Octavio said.
“What’s
an E-4?” Tom asked.
“A
Private. Someone fairly low in rank.”
“Oh. You
think she cheats on you?” Tom asked. He felt thirsty. “Maybe I will have some
tea. Do you have anything without caffeine? I… would like to sleep at some
point, if I’m able.” he said.
“Now that
I’m here, I’ll sit for a minute, if you don’t mind. Things have been a bit
hectic lately, wouldn’t you say? Feels nice to just sit and relax.” Octavio
responded.
Tom chuckled.
He couldn’t help it. Things have been
hectic… That got a nomination for understatement of the century. He resumed
his survey of the large room. On top of the fireplace’s mantle were a couple of
photos. None of them contained Octavio. “Are those the pictures that came with
the frames?” Tom asked.
“Yes.”
Octavio said. “I don’t have many family photos. I’m not exactly the sentimental
type.” Octavio said.
Again,
Tom laughed. It was an involuntary response that the doctor seemed to have an
uncanny knack for provoking. He just said things like that deadpan. Tom wasn’t
sure what to make of the man, honestly. He still felt a little uneasy, and he
thought that’s how the scientist wanted it. Fear and uncertainty can make
people much easier to manipulate.
“You seem
to care about us.” Tom pointed out.
“Speaking
of which, I guess I need to start heating up the water. I also need to get the
medication for your friends here.” Octavio said. He got up, groaning a little
as he did so. “Joints don’t make it any easier, do they?” he asked rhetorically
as he walked away.
Tom shook
his head. He wasn’t sure what to think anymore. He scanned a bookshelf that
rested on one wall near the chair the enigmatic man had been sitting in.
Several medical journals and thick leather-bound tomes. Squinting, he scanned
some of the titles. It appeared that Octavio had written some of the books that
rested there on the shelf. In addition, there were a few journals that elicited
a chortle from the former reporter for the El Paso Gazette. Experiments in Fluids, International Journal
of Control, and Pain were just a
few of the esoteric-sounding publications gracing the finite space allotted by
the evil doctor.
Visualizing
the odd older man sitting in that dark recliner and perusing an obscure medical
treatise exploring fluids, Tom chuckled again.
“What are
you laughing about?” Octavio said, striding into the room. He held a steaming
white ceramic mug with two hands. He bent his head slightly, stopping to inhale
the rich aromas of the tea. “Ahhh.” he said. “It’s a special blend of oolong.
We call it Phoenix, I believe. It comes from Guangdong Province in China.” he
said.
“Be
careful. It’s hot.” the doctor said. He handed the cup to Tom.
Taking
it, Tom gingerly sniffed the liquid. Widening his eyes, he inhaled the
delicious aromas of the exotic beverage. It smelled redolent of…fresh oranges.
“Did you put orange juice or something in this?” Tom asked. He took a sip,
careful to only indulge in a small amount at first to avoid burning his lips or
tongue. His natural instinct in response to the luxurious scent was to gulp the
drink and beg for more. If such a thing as ambrosia existed, this might be part
of the meal.
Octavio
smiled. He stood there, looking down, and the glint in his eyes seemed to
indicate he took some sort of peculiar pride in the tea. “No. That’s part of
what makes it special.” he said. His voice had changed a bit, lowering perhaps.
The fact
that tea would make this man proud seemed… vaguely offensive to Tom, though he
wanted to focus more on the warmth and aromas of the beverage in his hands. It
was so mundane, so trivial, that Tom almost equated the sense of annoyance he
experienced with the doctor’s humming. There was just something inappropriate, perhaps, about that. Turning
the mug in his hands, he read the mug. It said: “World’s Greatest Doctor.” Tom
chuckled. “What’s up with the weird journals? Fluids?” Tom asked. He took
another sip.
“It
relates to my work.” Octavio said. He turned his head slightly, nodded at some
internal, invisible prompt, and then retreated back into the kitchen without a
word.
Tom sat
there, relishing the moment. He seemed to feel the warm brew as it slid down
his gullet and began flowing through his bloodstream. His pulse jumped a few
beats and his body grew a little hotter. He wanted to be angry that the man had
served him something with caffeine against his express wishes, but it was just
so good that he decided not to care.
When death
and societal collapse seems imminent, sometimes it is better not to sweat the
small stuff.
Octavio
returned, sitting back down in what appeared to be his favored recliner. There
was no television in the room, which struck Tom as somewhat noteworthy. He
wasn’t sure why he hadn’t noticed that in the beginning. The focal point of
many living rooms is often a television, and yet, here in this stark,
relatively spartan household, the absence of one seemed… normal.
“How do
fluids relate to your work?” Tom asked. Another sip. He looked over at Delilah
and Mike. He blinked. He frowned. He’d almost forgotten entirely about his two
companions.
“This is
good tea, isn’t it?” Octavio asked.
“Yeah. It
is.” Tom agreed.
“I only
drink it on rare, special occasions.” Octavio said. He sniffed his drink before
he sipped. “It is fairly hard to come by, I’m told, especially outside of
China. I tried once trying to find this online, but was unable to do so.”
Octavio smiled. “Of course, that may just because I’m inept with things like the
internet sometimes. I’m a bit older.” He shrugged and went through his ritual
of inhale-then-sip.
“What’s
the special occasion?” Tom asked. Since he didn’t seem to be able to get a
straight answer to any of his questions, he figured he’d play along.
Octavio tensed. He placed his mug
on a nearby wooden table. A frown was etched onto his mien. “You asked about
fluids.” he said.
Tom could
only nod. He gripped his mug tighter in an unconscious reaction, as if afraid
that the man would now try to take his tea away.
“A lot of
my career was devoted to blood. In a way.” Octavio said. His voice almost
sounded wistful. The evil doctor looked towards the ceiling. “I worked for a
number of years at Walter Reed. That’s where most Army Medical Corps people end
up.” Octavio picked up his drink again. He took a drink without lingering over
the robust aroma. “The big thing in the military is blood. You can lose a lot
of blood during trauma, especially the sorts commonly encountered in armed
conflict. That, and lost limbs.” he said.
Octavio
laughed. It was a low, cynical laugh. The sound came so abruptly and seemed so
out of place that Tom looked over to see if the man might have finally
collapsed into permanent psychosis. Octavio waved a hand in the air dismissively.
“Sorry.”
He took a drink of tea. He issued an audible sigh. “You asked about liquids.
And you asked about the ‘special occasion.’” He smiled ruefully. “Do you know
where rabies comes from?” he asked.
Tom shook
his head. Of all the many things he’d devoted time to studying in his life,
rabies wasn’t one of them.
“A lot of
people don’t, I suppose.” Octavio’s eyes became distant, and a tense, expectant
silence loitered between them as Tom sat forward. “Fluid. It’s a fluid. Rabies
comes from saliva.” Octavio said. The Major gripped a fistful of the chair’s
arm’s leather. He turned pale for a moment. Then it passed. “I’m about to go
even further down a path I can’t really come back from.” he said, idly. Then he
chuckled. “I’m not supposed to ever tell anyone this, of course. Anyway, that’s
the connection. We spent many years modifying the rabies virus. But, then we
wanted to see if we could make it airborne. It would be just one more great
chemical agent if we could, and we did.”
“Why is
it ‘great?’” Tom asked.
“It takes
a while for symptoms to develop. It’s not easily detectable. There is no
noxious gas cloud, et cetera. Plus, scientists don’t acknowledge that rabies
can be spread through the air, because, scientifically, it can’t.” Octavio
said. He smiled.
“It can’t
be scientifically spread through the air, and yet you can spread it through the
air.” Tom repeated, blinking.
“Precisely.”
Octavio said. Then he chuckled again. This one seemed a self-congratulatory laugh.
“So, we
had to do extensive testing. But, the long and short of it all is that we have
a sort of concentrate. Soak the fluid into maltodextrin and you now have a
powder form of a highly contagious, deadly virus that is hard to detect.”
Octavio said.
“But,
there are still weaknesses.” he said.
Tom was
suddenly fascinated. Part of it probably was the fact that he wanted to have
some idea of what had happened to him. He wanted to create some meaning for his
experience. To have an explanation. He’d done things during his prolonged
period of near-delirium that he could probably never forget. Even beginning to
remember them inflicted a sort of trauma on him. But, it was also more than
that. Here he was talking to a man that was part of creating what might be the
newest weapon of mass destruction, but it was an invisible weapon few could
ever plan for or see coming. This mad genius was literally altering the entire
history of the planet, and he made maybe a hundred grand a year doing so.
“The
virus might not infect people? You might not be able to control some of the
symptoms?” Tom asked.
Octavio
shook his head. “No. The virus we have here is extremely effective. Very few
people exposed to it directly will be resistant. Rabies is almost always lethal
in humans once symptoms appear. But,” He held up one warning finger. “But, and
this is a big but, rabies is also exceedingly rare in humans. In America, it is
usually from dogs or bats. It comes from canines in most of the world.”
“Why is
that a weakness?” Tom interrupted.
“Well, if
you’d let me finish.” Octavio said, smiling. His eyes had a doleful sheen to
them. “It’s a weakness because if we just infected a populace with rabies, then
people would know. Once they knew, the Russians, the Chinese, hell, everyone
would not only develop the same thing, if they haven’t already, but then they’d
use it. It’s a brutally effective weapon that we essentially could never use.
It’s not nearly as efficient as a nuclear bomb. And, we have nuclear weapons
mostly as a deterrent. No one, including the United States government, ever
wants to actually use nuclear weapons.”
“How
would people know?” Tom asked. “I thought that was the point. That they have
delayed symptoms.” Tom said.
“You are
such a smart man. But, why ask me stupid questions?” Octavio said. He got an
impatient, almost avuncular set to his face as he gave a silent admonition to
his interlocutor. “It’s exceedingly rare. I covered that, right? There would be
almost no way even twenty people would get rabies in a single area, and it
would be truly unique and unprecedented for even a small number of people to
contract the virus without being bitten. If thousands or hundreds of thousands
of people suddenly came down with rabies, it would be a problem, of course.
But, by itself, it could be contained fairly quickly, one could assume.”
“So,
what’s the fucking point of developing a weapon you can never use?” Tom asked.
“That, my friend, is the question.”
Octavio said. Then he cackled.
Then the
phone penetrated the ensuing silence.
Tom
jumped. They both looked towards the device. A slim black cordless device, the
lights glowed a greenish-yellow. The ringtone sounded high-pitched and angry,
like the squawk of some distressed bird. He looked at it, smiling impishly. He
wondered just how many people in the modern era still had landline phones.
Octavio
got up. There was something in his body language that indicated he did not like
this development. He approached the phone cautiously, as if it might explode
upon contact. His shoulders appears tight and one of his fists was clenched at
his side. The doctor reached down with a quick, jerky movement and picked up
the receiver.
“Hello?”
he answered.
Chapter 11
“How did
you get this number?” Octavio asked.
He turned
slightly. Glaring at Tom, he took the phone into the other room.
Tom
tensed. He felt his heart rate jamming a finger against the eject button.
Sliding
out of his seat, his eyes darted furtively around. He felt the hair standing up
on his arms. Tom allowed his gaze to linger briefly on Delilah. She seemed to
be so peaceful, resting there in her seat. A protective urge overcame him, and
it added to his resolve to make it out of this situation. He wanted to see what
was next. He knew he probably wouldn’t like it. He understood it would probably
be ugly. But, Delilah provided an extra dose of inspiration for moving forward
into the shadows and dust of anarchy. Tom tried to sneak over to eavesdrop on
the conversation Octavio was trying to exclude him from.
“Shit.”
Tom said, raising one hand to his mouth to stifle the expletive-laced
exclamation. He tensed his jaw. He stood there for a few seconds, trying to
calm his heartbeat. Silently chastising himself for his bumbling idiocy, he
looked down at his feet in quiet admonition. He tried to communicate his exigent
need to his feet, as if by sheer force of will he could induce them to act.
He almost
laughed at himself. Standing there, swaying slightly and staring down at his
feet. But then he looked ahead. He needed to move.
Tom crept
forward towards the arched entryway. He could hear the doctor’s voice, though
at his current position, he couldn’t decipher any of the individual words. The
evil scientist’s tone sounded hushed and somber, and this was enough to cause
Tom some concern. Octavio always seemed to be in control, and maybe Tom had
gotten used to that fact. Maybe he had even started to rely on that. He frowned
as he took yet another small step forward. Relying totally on the Major was a
recipe for disaster.
Inching
closer, he controlled his breathing. Every sense seemed heightened. He could
feel the tightness in his chest. His legs throbbed and his arms quivered from
the instant shot of adrenaline that flowed through his veins. Fear was a
corsair eyeing the treasures of his sanity with avaricious interest as it
approached through the murky waters of his veins. He paused. Placing his back
against the stucco wall, he listened.
“You want
me to surrender this man? I still don’t understand why.” Octavio said.
There was
a lengthy pause.
The lapse
in conversation was the last thing Tom needed. His sense of calm that he’d
somehow plucked from the depths of his soul threatened to collapse on itself as
he pondered the import of the little bit he’d already heard. That man Octavio referenced… it almost
certainly wasn’t Mike. What would anyone want with Mike? He was a brilliant
painter, but he barely had a following. He was a poor, almost homeless gay
artist living in El Paso. Tom loved the man, and would put his own safety at
risk to try to protect him. But, objectively, no one really gave a shit about
him. Which meant that Tom was that man.
He perked
up. His muscles tensed. Octavio had resumed talking.
“So, this
man has secrets you want to keep. I guess I can understand that. But, you know
things about me. And you say you have my wife. Why should I trust you? You are
blackmailing me to try to get the man who could blackmail you. Do you see my
dilemma?” Octavio said.
Tom sank
to the floor. His lachrymal glands began their work. Tears coursed down his
cheeks. He wanted to run, but there was nowhere he could run to. And that fact,
that horrible sense of helpless vulnerability crushed him in that moment.
It hurt
worse knowing he’d somehow dragged others into this mess. Innocent people
inadvertently shared in his pain and torture for no other reason than their
association with him. The fact that all of them had made the conscious decision
to help, fully cognizant of the risks to themselves, eluded the former reporter
in that moment.
“Okay.
Fine. He’s not that important to me. As you said, my mission is more important.
If you can pledge that amount of money and the considerable media resources you
have at your disposal, I will bring him. We can meet at the old cathedral.
Mm-hmm. Yes.” Another pause. “See you in one hour.”
Ocatvio
chuckled. “No. Of course I will not call the police.” he said.
Stumbling,
the doctor tripped on Tom’s leg when he rounded the corner. He stopped. He
looked down at Tom. Malevolent contempt shined in his eyes. “Get up.” he
commanded. Octavio towered over the former newspaper writer. He clenched one of
his fists.
“We have
to go. Get up.” Octavio said, clenching his jaw, carefully enunciating the
words as he spoke slowly.
Tom
leaned on one arm and slowly maneuvered himself into a standing position with
the help of the wall. He stood there, trying to avoid the intense stare of the
martinet across from him. The oxygen seemed to have been sucked from the small
space. Tom’s chest heaved as he fought to breathe.
“You
heard everything?” Octavio asked. He raised one eyebrow. Something in him
visibly relaxed, as if he had relinquished any hope of getting Tom to move
quicker through sternness and anger.
Tom
nodded. His eyes felt moist. He looked up and into the brown eyes of his
interlocutor and apologized silently a thousand times for the unspoken crime.
“Okay.”
Octavio took a deep breath. “Okay. Well… okay.” Octavio chuckled. He looked
away for a second. Then he turned and moved forward with the conversation.
“Apparently the some of the people you were investigating are still following
you. They had drones or something that captured at least some of what was going
on at the prison in Kenedy. They know you escaped.”
“And
you’re going to turn me in.” Tom said, his voice quavering. His knees trembled.
His heart thrashed and howled from inside its prison walls. His mouth felt dry.
He wanted to be anywhere but here. He against experienced the cloying dread and
the impending sense of helpless captivity. Vivid memories of the night when he
could have escaped Delilah’s backyard danced just behind his eyes.
Shivering,
Tom blinked. He focused and looked up at Octavio. The doctor had clapped a firm
hand on his shoulder.
“I’m
going to pretend. That’s it.” he said.
“Wha…”
Tom muttered, licking his lips. He shied away from any continued touch.
“I can’t
let them live after telling me what they know.” he said.
Tom sank
down to the floor. He collapsed into tears. He sobbed, the agony and doleful
weariness strafing the last remaining garrisons tasked with defending his soul.
“Wh,wh,why…” he said. He tried to think. He balled his fists up and hit himself
on the side of the head as he rocked back and forth, thick globs of snot welling
up under his nose and making it difficult for him to breathe.
“Why…why
do I always get stuck in the middle of this? No…no one ever gives a shit about
ME!” he said, again wracked by sobs and an inconsolable rage.
Octavio
waited.
Gradually,
Tom calmed down. He always calmed down. And he felt ashamed. He knew he would
just get up and allow himself to be led by this treacherous madman. He would do
whatever the nefarious doctor said, because he felt trapped. He was trapped. He had no other viable
option. And that fact threatened to throw him over the edge once again into the
gully of insanity.
But he
somehow plucked himself from the malicious, noisome maw of that cruel beast.
Fetid
madness would someday reign, Tom sensed. But it would not be today. He took the
proffered hand and stood. He swayed on his feet. “What do I do?” Tom asked. He
wiped the slick snot from his face with the back of one hand. He looked idly at
his hand for a second, holding it close to his face. Then he chuckled and wiped
it on his dirty jumpsuit.
“How the
hell did we even manage to get this far?” Tom wondered aloud.
“That is a great question.” Octavio said.
Chapter 12
“Fuck
those pricks.” The strange man in the backseat said.
They were
driving down the nearly deserted freeway, the faint jaundiced glow of the
passing lights interrupted by the black buzzing clouds of insects. The moon
sang its silent, solemn hymns from its celestial pulpit. The breeze felt good
as it rushed by. Tom could smell rain coming. He also picked up the heavy odors
of industry. Oil and grease and pent-up rancor.
Swerving
over violently, Octavio took Exit 84E and they found themselves suddenly
catapulted into a vast labyrinthine warren of shifting shadows. The wind took
on a different inflection here, surrounded as they were by large buildings. Tom
rolled his window up and looked around, trying to still his trembling nerves.
He hands shook and his eyes seemed to twitch. Several of the old, rusted
edifices seemed to take on their own menacing personalities, the soft glow from
the cracked and dusty windows like the light from their infernal eyes and the
blackened gaps the cavities of the blue-collar smile.
The man
in the back cracked his knuckles. “Let me out here.” he said.
The
vehicle screeched to an abrupt halt. The sturdy man wearing all black got out
unceremoniously, merging with the night shortly after slamming the door shut.
The
violent ricochet reverberated through the tight confines of the vehicle’s
interior. Tom jumped. He looked in the rearview mirror and saw that he’d
blanched and grown a dangerous shade of pale, and, somehow, this made him feel
angry. He was tired of startling.
“You
remember the plan?” Octavio asked, keeping his voice low and even.
Tom took
a deep breath. He had to hand it to the doc. The man knew how to maintain
control of a difficult situation. He also seemed to have a knack for extracting
value from the oddest situations. “I… yeah. I mean, I’m just going to stand
there, basically.” he said.
Which
was, strictly speaking, accurate. Tom was supposed to go in acting terrified.
That wouldn’t be so hard, given the fact that, well, he was. Other than that,
he was to lay low and wait for the shooting to start. The unnamed man who’d
accompanied them on this mission was going to snipe the main targets, helping
Octavio secure his wife before they swept the area. If anyone was left alive,
they were going to take them back to the now-crowded house, where Octavio would
interrogate them.
Tom still
wasn’t sure how the doctor planned to interrogate the people AND unleash the
zombie apocalypse, but he wasn’t going to bother asking too many questions. If
he were being totally honest, he didn’t really care. As long as he got any
tools and help he might need to help he and his friends survive long enough to
get the fuck out of town, he could care less about any of the small details. He
was in no real mood to think coherently at the moment, anyway.
Octavio eased his foot onto the gas
and resumed their steady encroachment into the demesne of the dense, dark
shadows. They drove slower now. The doctor seemed to be tense, more alert. He
hunched forward a bit, and his eyes scanned the deserted street for any signs
of movement. Or traps. The pugnacious stench of blood lust filled the air.
Tom wanted to vomit. He felt
afraid.
Sitting there, buckled up in the
passenger seat of the sports utility vehicle that was steadily moving towards
danger, Tom reflected on the smells of imminent death and depravity. It
probably would sound crazy, but he had gotten frequent whiffs of that heinous
odor over the course of the last several… weeks? Months? He wondered now about
all of those years when people had described dogs sensing fear. The
endocrinological and physiological responses of the human body created a bevy
of unpleasant sensations, and the desire to cause others harm, the brutal hunger
to inflict rank violence… it made Tom want to throw up.
Every. Single. Time.
The car stopped.
“What’s…”
“Shhh…” Octavio said. He put a thin
finger up to his plump lips and turned to look at his cohort. They waited. The
silence that loitered was an angry dissident. It conspired to cause them harm
as it patiently plotted the right moment to act.
Looking out of the tinted window of
the vehicle, he saw a large building. An old church. They were in a heavily
industrial area, and there seemed something profane about the existence of the historical
sanctuary residing here, amongst the abandoned factories. Edifices constructed
to fulfil base human desires and rank avarice. A light glowed softly inside the
building. It had a sort of stone bell tower that rose up into the night,
offering silent paens to the silver lunar saint that offered her soft light to
any and all who sought her refuge.
A golden dome revealed itself. Tom
studied the building, transfixed by its historicity and beauty. Such a simple,
elegant testament to the power and resiliency of the human spirit.
“Get out.” Octavio said.
Careful to shut the door softly so
as not to disturb the sanctity and stillness of the night, Tom looked around.
He felt calm. He noted this, and wondered what had changed. Not long ago, he’d
been terrified. He was not a man of mystery. He’d been a journalist for so
long, committed to non-violence. He’d never been in any dangerous situations
prior to the discovery of the disruptive secrets that had landed him here.
Yet it was those secrets that had
led him down this dark path. Tom could even say that it was the knowledge of
those secrets that had changed him. His adversaries had broken him. But, in
breaking him, they had turned him into a man. A dangerous man. A man without anything
left to lose. A man without fear of consequences. They had condemned him to
die. And the evil doctor accompanying him into the demesne of the dense shadows
had helped rescue him. Plucked from the malignant maw of death, Tom had only
one desire: to kill those who sought to do him harm.
Tom startled.
The doctor was next to him. Leaning
close, Octavio gripped his shoulder hard. Tom winced. He tried to ease out of
the tight grasp, but Octavio held them there. A reminder that the man possessed
both mental and physical strength. Tom saw a brief flash of memory and
shuddered. Turning slightly to look at the swarthy enigma, he realized perhaps
for the first time just how dangerous he was. The idea that it only had just
struck him threatened to make him laugh. And it was not an appropriate time for
mirth.
Octavio’s breath was warm and
vaguely redolent of gas station hot dogs. “We’re going to go in over there.” he
said, his voice low. He pointed with one of his long, thin fingers. Tom
followed along with his eyes, still wondering when the doctor would release his
shoulder. “Once we get inside, you have to try to be aware of everything around
you. Okay?” the doctor asked.
Tom nodded. It was all he could
think to do. Of course I’m going to pay
attention to everything around me. How could I not? Tom thought. He shifted
his weight, and almost fell when his traveling companion, the evil doctor,
suddenly relinquished his vise grip. Stumbling, he accused Octavio with his
glare, but recovered quicker than he thought he might normally do. He
straightened, then saw how the doctor had adopted a sort of crouch as he slowly
progressed. There was something vaguely predatory in that posture.
Following the man’s lead, Tom
proceeded towards the large church. The sultry night air whispered seductively
as it sauntered by. Lights could be seen in the far distance to the left. He
fought the urge to stop and stare. No longer was he the poet-journalist. Life
was about to change. Dramatically. He was locked in a dangerous game of predator-versus-prey,
and Tom Martinez was tired of being the weak victim. Somehow, this line of
thought captured his attention. Helped him focus.
He remembered a man named Johnson
from El Paso.
Fists clenched and heart racing,
Tom closed the slight gap between himself and the doctor. Octavio held up a
hand and paused for a brief second.
“Keep some space between us.” the doctor said in a near-whisper.
They got to the doorway. A certain
awe seemed to have been absorbed into the hallowed ground of the historical
landmark. This old church, with its colorful stained-glass windows and spires,
had borne witness to many of the land’s bloodiest and darkest secrets. Tom
wondered what it was going to see tonight.
Octavio bent down and inspected the
doorway for several seconds before tentatively proceeding. He eased the thick
wooden door open. The stood there for a minute or two, waiting. During that
time, as Tom tried to quell the rising panic inside and still his rebellious
heart, they both acclimated their eyes to the low light inside. Outside in the desert
air, the moon and streetlamps, as well as the agglomeration of a million
peoples’ electric crutches, penetrated the darkness. In the hushed interior of
this cathedral, the light was notably vacant.
They stepped inside.
Dust dominated every surface. The
floor creaked when they stepped on it. Tom looked up. The ceiling seemed to
rise to infinity. He couldn’t make out the paintings adorning it, but he saw
some of the outlines from the narrow shaft of light allowed inside from the
open door. A dirty Sawzall rested on the ground. “Watch out for nails.” Octavio
said, turning and getting close to him. Tom fought the urge to grimace at the
stench of the man’s breath. He nodded to let the leader of their odd little
pack know he understood.
They must have been doing some sort
of renovation or something. As they moved deeper into the interior of the
building, Tom encountered more tools. Some of the walls had holes in them, with
exposed piping and other material. Realizing that this could be an opportunity
to help hone the sense of awareness he needed, Tom tried to keep his eyes
peeled.
Every sense stood on edge as they
moved at a snail’s pace. Tom possessed no clue as to where they were headed. He
barely thought he knew why they were here. He realized once again just how much
he’d come to rely on and even trust this doctor escorting him through the
darkness. The irony was not lost on him, though he forced himself to file it
away for later.
Tom heard something.
He stopped.
Every hair on his body seemed to
stand up. His body tingled. His nerves stood at attention. Tom looked around,
allowing his eyes to strafe the many nooks and crannies of the capacious
interior of the old religious sanctuary. He tried to stifle the obscene sense of
foreboding that permeated his being. He felt as if he were somehow violating
the sanctity of this place with his mere presence, and he said a silent prayer.
Tom Martinez had never been a
religious man. In fact, he’d developed a thick carapace of anti-religious
fervor over the many years of his professional career. He saw spirituality as a
load of crap, a cover for the avarice and hollow wanton lust for power that
dominated so many segments of human society. Yet, as he stood there, trembling
and trying to decipher the shadows’ secrets in the hushed demesne of the unseen
forces said to govern Earthly affairs, he felt… something. Something that could
even be called an awakening. An epiphany. He wasn’t sure if he’d ever be a
humble believer or an ardent adherent of any faith, but if he escaped this
newest adventure with his life, Tom might just begin accepting the notion that
there was, in fact, a deity out there.
“Hello.”
Tom jumped. He stifled a squeal
only by jamming one hand over his mouth with a quick, jerky motion.
“Hi.” Octavio said.
Octavio appeared calm. He had
stopped, but he wasn’t shaking. His voice was even when he spoke. Nothing about
his demeanor seemed to indicate that he was in the presence of danger. He had
one hand in his pants pocket as he stood in the middle of the open area, dusty
pews off to his left.
Glancing around, Tom tried to find
any places where he could hide. He turned briefly and glanced reluctantly
towards the path leading to the outside world. Escape. A terrible sense of déjÃ
vu enveloped him, and he had to fight his way through it. Once before he’d had
the chance to run, and he hadn’t taken it.
He’d ended up in a cell afterwards.
Eating his cellmate.
“I have your wife.” the other man
said.
Tom didn’t recognize the voice. The
other person, who’d summoned them by threat, stood in the darkness, partly
concealed. It seemed as if he had some sort of mask on as well.
“I can see that. So you told me.”
Octavio said.
The man who would have Tom executed
for his knowledge stepped forward, emerging from the shadows. He had one large
arm around a woman’s neck. Tears streamed down her face, sending black greasy
streaks down her cheeks.
Octavio shot her.
The sound of the gun firing
reverberated through the hallowed space. It hurt Tom’s ears. They rang so hard,
and he reached up to cover them even as he ducked and crawled towards the
nearby wooden pews. He felt as if he were choking on the dust that seemed to
linger on every surface.
He mewled. He didn’t realize it at
first, but when he uncovered his ears, he realized he was sobbing in a pitiful
display of his former self. He tried to stop, but felt as if he couldn’t. What the fuck just happened? he
wondered.
Tom hadn’t even seen the doctor
move. He was transfixed by the wife. Standing there looking at her while also
trying to divine the identity of the inimical presence holding her hostage, Tom
had been an inadvertent witness to her murder. He blinked. His heart raced. He
tried to focus. He heard voices.
“Holy
fucking shit! What…”
“I need you
to be calm, okay?” Octavio said.
“Be calm?
Be calm?” the other man asked,
incredulous, his voice high.
Tom
almost smiled. He liked that the other person was afraid. Yet, that fear came
at the expense of someone’s life. The singed air bore testament to that fact.
He sniffed, wiping a hand over his nose. The stench of gunfire… there was
something vaguely primal and alluring to it. Tom didn’t want to admit liking
it, but he kind of did.
“Yes, I
need you to be calm.” Octavio repeated.
Tom
peeked around the edge of the pew. He saw that the evil doctor was approaching
the other man.
“Stay the
fuck AWAY from me, man.” the masked hostage-taker-without-a-hostage exclaimed.
“Now,
watch your language. We’re in a church.” Octavio said, continuing his slow approach
towards the gunman.
“Don’t
you know I have a fucking gun?” the man asked. His voice was shrill.
“Don’t
you know I don’t care?” Octavio asked. He paused. Looked up and around. “My
friend, if you so much as look at me wrong, I have someone with a very powerful
gun trained on you. Now, they are a very good shot. And, perhaps unfortunately,
they developed a certain… affinity? Yes, an affinity. They developed an
affinity for killing while serving the wonderful United States of America.
Sometimes old habits die hard.” Octavio chuckled. Then he began walking forward
again.
The other
man raised his dominant hand, pointing the small silver revolver at Octavio.
Tom
blinked. When he opened his eyes and looked up, he saw the man on the ground in
the fetal position. He was mumbling to himself as sobs wracked his body. He
trembled as if caught up in paroxysms. Tom looked around. He hadn’t even heard
the shot. He tried to see where the hidden accomplice laid. The shadows,
however, retained their protective powers, successfully concealing the shooter
from view.
Tom
stood. He tip-toed over towards Octavio, who was crouched next to the man.
Octavio dug through the bloody
gentleman’s pockets, retrieving what appeared to be a bulging black leather
wallet. “Amil… do you pronounce that ah-meel? A-mil?” Octavio asked, his voice
low. He made a sound, sort of a what-do-you-know sigh. The doctor stood. “Kind
of name is that, Amil?”
“You fucking shot me!” the man
said.
Octavio knelt back down. He removed
the black cotton mask from the man’s face, peeling it back to reveal what lay
beneath. “I did not shoot you.”
Octavio reached over and picked up Amil’s revolver. He ran one finger over it
with seeming admiration. “You ever used one of these, Amil?” he asked. He
smiled.
Standing again, the doctor looked
towards Tom. “You okay?” he asked.
Tom nodded.
“Amil, I’m afraid I don’t have much
time. I’m going to need you to come with me. We’re going to ask you some
questions, and you’re going to answer them truthfully. In which case, I’ll kill
you quickly. If you try to not answer my questions or lie to me, well…” Octavio
fired one shot from the revolver into the air.
Tom jumped. Amil screamed.
“You never fired a gun, did you?
How in the fuck did you manage to get my wife hostage?” he asked rhetorically.
“I was fucking her.” Amil shouted, his face contorted with rage, the
muscles corded and bulging in his neck, spittle flying from the corners of his
mouth.
Octavio laughed. “At least somebody
was. She really was a toxic bitch.” he said. “Get up.” He commanded.
“I’m not going anywhere with you!”
Amil shrieked.
Octavio pivoted, moving quicker
than Tom thought he could. He closed the short distance between them in less
than a second, putting his face in front of the other man’s. He bit the man’s
nose. Hard. Twisting, he tore Amil’s tender flesh. He spat a chunk of the
wounded man’s nose into his face. Then he stood. He took two steps, then again
swiftly turned. He began kicking Amil. Each blow landed with a soft, ugly thud
that echoed through the cavernous interior of the cathedral.
The doctor’s victim doubled over,
resuming his earlier fetal pose. He mewled, strings of incoherent gibberish
escaping his lips in the universal language of the vanquished.
“Thomas, you think you can help me
carry Mr. Amil here back to the car?” Octavio asked.
Chapter 13
“We’re
going to have to hide you in the back again.”
Octavio
spoke without taking his eyes from the road.
The afternoon sun blushed as it
flirted with the voluptuous lunar orb playing hard to get from across the sky.
The harsh light cast by the bright orange ball of light forced Tom to blink. He
looked back towards the cluttered back of the vehicle. He didn’t want to sit
next to that man. The stench of fear nauseated Tom, and Amil positively reeked
of it. The stale, sour, cloying odor emanated from the wounded creature.
“What are we going to do to him?”
Tom asked.
“We? You’re not going to do
anything. You’re going to think about what you’re going to do, where your going
to go tomorrow. You should probably think more about getting some rest and
getting some food. You seem to be able to hold food down okay, which kind of
surprised me, honestly.” Octavio laughed. “Your whole situation surprises me.
You…you’re an anomaly.”
“You’re still experimenting on me,
aren’t you?” Tom asked.
Octavio tightened his grip on the
wheel. It was a brief, almost imperceptible gesture that lasted no longer than
a few seconds. Then he smiled. His gleaming, even white teeth showed. Turning,
he fixed his stern, emotionless brown eyes on Tom. “Don’t be too smart for your
own good.” he said. Though his lips were turned up, displaying the universal
gesture of happiness and warmth, in a broad and open smile, the words offered a
chilling rebuke. It was a warning. A threat.
Tom blinked. He looked away. He
felt his heart flutter. Something seemed to be ringing in his ears suddenly,
growing progressively louder. Clearing his throat, the angry sound slowly
subsided. He wanted to be done with all of this. To move on. A part of him even
wanted to just slink away and die.
“Just tell me when to get in the
back.” Tom said meekly. His lips moved without any sound escaping. He wanted to
resist. On the side close to the door, hidden from the mad doctor’s view, Tom
clenched and unclenched his fist several times. He could feel the veins in his
neck pulsing and his muscles twitching. But, he knew. He knew that resistance
was futile. He thought of Delilah.
Octavio kept his gaze fixed on Tom
for several moments after he’d reluctantly asserted his desire to comply. They
continued to moved through the nearly deserted night streets. Finally, he
focused back on the road in front of them. Looking out the window towards the
sky, he saw it starting to show signs of waking up.
The lethal silent companion that
stalked the shadows as a soldier for hire sat behind Tom. He snored softly, his
head tilted back against the soft black oblong headrest of his seat. Tom tried
to ignore the sound, but there was something shockingly obscene about it. It
reminded him of Octavio’s humming.
Flashing back to the things he’d
already seen and endured, Tom wondered. He wondered just what it would take for
him to finally find a moment of peace and rest from the myriad evils afflicting
this world. Terrible terrors trembled through his body, and he started to
sweat. He gripped the edge of his seat. He began having trouble breathing, and
for a moment, he wished that he would just fade away.
His body febrile and his chest
tight, he wanted to ask Octavio to stop. He almost laughed out loud, the
maniacal mirth that had become his only traveling companion through the
desolate wasteland known as planet Earth, when the realization struck him that
he literally feared the doctor more than he did death.
He began to relax. The pain and
viscerality of the memories that haunted the attic of his mind ebbed. However,
the nagging doubts remained. They seemed to be whispering deep, melodic secrets
to his subconscious as they patiently waited for the right time to strike. He
felt tired. The sort of fatigue that accompanies severe stress.
The car stopped. Opening his eyes
wide, Tom looked around. A small sound escaped his lips. They sat in a crowded
parking lot. Morning sunshine glinted off the hood of the car, obstructing his
vision. Reaching up, he covered his eyes. After the incisive reminder from the
celestial martinet, he wiped at the crust that had formed in his lashes. His
mouth felt dry, as if he’d been munching on stale cat litter for a few hours.
He’d fallen asleep.
The commotion of a cart scratching
across the hot San Antonio pavement forced him to turn to confront the ugly
noise. Tom turned to look at the intrusive noise. The anonymous hired gun
farted, the flatulence emulating the sound of pants ripping. He turned up his
nose, raising his dirty shirt to cover his nostrils. It smelled horrible, like
rotten eggs. “Jeez.” Tom said. Focusing on the racket that had trespassed on
the idyllic refuge of his dreams, Tom saw a stooped-over gaunt old man with
leathery brown wrinkled skin and a wild patch of pure white hair struggling to
load a cardboard box into the back of his rusted little car. A boxy thing pulled
straight from the 80’s, the vehicle brought on a wave of nostalgia in Tom.
He’d had many good times in an AMC
Pacer, which looked somewhat close to the bug-shaped automobile in the adjacent
parking spot.
“Should we help him?” Tom asked. He
turned and saw that Octavio was not in the driver’s seat. For some reason, this
made the former journalist want to panic. He took several deep breaths and
fought the dark urge. Slowly, the adrenaline stopped its assault on his body
and his heart rate slowed. As he struggled with the odd notion that his captor
and protector was not there to lord over him and control him, Tom
simultaneously felt compelled to get out of the car. He wanted to help this
man.
Opening the door, he stepped down.
His body felt weak. He’d been slumped over in the doctor’s personal vehicle for
who knew how long, and his joints felt stiff. “Can I help you?” Tom asked.
The geriatric gentleman startled,
then slowly turned around. He had liver spots on his hands. He squinted and
looked up at Tom. There was something… shocking in his reaction. The man’s lips
quivered and he sniffed. He almost fell back, but caught himself before the
process got to the point of no return. “No, thanks.” the man finally said.
Tom nodded. It was the only thing
he could think to do. He stood there under the hot, hectoring sun, his jaw
slack, his mind numb, and stared.
As the man returned to the arduous
task unaided, Tom pivoted and faced himself in the small oblong rearview
mirror. OBJECTS MAY BE CLOSER THAN THEY APPEAR. It was written in small black
block letters on the bottom of the reflective surface. Tom stared. He didn’t
recognize himself.
He’d lost a lot of weight. A patchy
mass of black hair covered much of his face. That fact seemed odd. It didn’t
itch. Tom honestly hadn’t realized it was there. He’d never really ever been
able to grow much of a beard, and on the rare occasion when he’d thought to try
for whatever reason, it had been so embarrassingly evident that it was a
failure that he’d been reluctant to try again for interminable periods. His
Apache side. His rank, rumpled clothes were smeared with dark crusty streaks
and globs. Torn in places, he appeared as if he’d just escaped an asylum for
the criminally insane: something which wasn’t exactly far from the truth.
His unknown traveling companion
gently but firmly guided Tom back to the vehicle, pushing him inside the front
seat and shutting the locked door behind him. Before Tom even had a chance to
turn to look back and confront the man, he was there, his nasty breath hot and
humid in his face. The man’s green eyes seemed wild. “Do NOT do that again?” he
said.
“Or what?” Tom asked. He blanched
as soon as the words escaped his lips. He smiled, but then immediately became
somber. He inched backwards, retreating, trying to create some physical
separation between himself and the mean mercenary. Mendacious thoughts raced
through his mind, trying to deploy their guile in an effort to make him believe
the manic lie that he could take back some control of the situation. Even
though his heart raced and fear was a corsair slicing through the choppy waters
of his veins, Tom couldn’t help but feel a little proud that he’d somehow
summoned, even at the basest, most subconscious of levels, the verve to utter
such words of resistance.
The paid assassin chuckled. He sat
back in his seat. “What does he see in you?” he asked. He waved a large hairy
hand. “Don’t fuckin’ answer that. It’s rhetorical.”
“What’s he see in you?” Tom asked.
He gulped. His mouth felt dry. “What’s your name, anyway? I have to call you
something.”
The man cocked his head to the
side. He had a sort of boxy face, vaguely Eastern European. Coarse black hair
covered his exposed massive forearms. His green eyes appeared both alert and
stern. They possessed an almost bizarre dichotomy, seeming both intelligent and
dull at the same time. Reaching up with one of his big hands, he scratched at the
stubble growing on his block chin.
“Call me Jake.” he said.
Jake twisted his head, then got out
of the car with no more than three fluid movements. The rapidity with which he
moved was unnerving. It was scary and unnatural.
Tom tried to follow the man’s
progress as he went around the back of the vehicle. Then he heard the driver’s
side door open. Looking over, he saw Octavio there.
The doctor moved his lips as if to
speak, but was stopped by Jake. Giving his attention to the swift mercenary, he
bent down to confer in hushed tones with his murderous associate. After a few
seconds, it became apparent the two were talking about Tom. The doctor’s jaw
became set, and his posture tensed. Turning, he fixed his cold brown eyes on
the former journalist. A simmering, barely restrained anger gleamed just
beneath the surface, and it sent a shiver up Tom’s spine.
Octavio nodded his head. The two
split up, both of them heading around the side of the vehicle towards the back.
Tom turned, twisting to try and watch them as they walked through the parking
lot. Motion caught his eye. Distracted, he focused on the intrusive movement
with a grunt. One of those tall flappy things you see at used car lots, bright
red, with a simpering smile plastered on its plastic face, waved its long arms
under the hectoring guidance of a strategically placed fan. Fireworks. The
gimmicky display was drawing attention to a small fireworks stand stationed
near the exit of the large parking lot. The banner above the wooden booth
screamed with all its might that they had discount pyrotechnics to serve every
American’s need. Yellow, with red letters, the flashy advert seemed both cheesy
and traditional.
Octavio got into the driver’s side.
He slammed the door behind him. Sitting there for several seconds, hands
gripping the wheel with carefully controlled rage, the doctor stared forward
silently. The reverberating effect of his gesture lingered, enhanced by the
solemnity with which he sat there. When he turned, a frown was etched onto his
face. An almost doleful downturn of his lips. “You can’t ever do anything like
that again.” he said.
Words jostled against each other in
his muddled brain. He wanted to say so many things, the thoughts playing bumper
cars in the carnival of his mind, none of them quite sequential. Tom felt aware
that he’d opened his mouth, but he just moved it dumbly without uttering a
sound. He smelled the other man when he got into the car. Vaguely onion-like,
the odor of stale sweat and dirty clothing. “You’re just going to let me go
tomorrow.” Tom said.
Octavio nodded. “Very good point.
But, you do remember the teensy, weensy little detail about, oh, the chemical
cloud that will cause millions to erupt into spontaneous violence?” he said. It
was a mouthful.
Something about the words pricked
his antennae and made them stand up. He sounded and even appeared calm, as
usual, but… teensy, weensy? That
didn’t sound like something the refined Army Officer and research scientist
would normally say. What would have caused such an anomaly? Such a rare
divergence from established norms? Part of Tom wanted to pick at that, see if
there were something there which could give him even the… teensiest, weensiest
bit of leverage. He smiled as he sat there.
“What are you smiling about?”
Octavio asked. He was frowning.
A car honked behind them. Both
Octavio and Tom jumped. Tom thought he saw the other man blush.
Trying hard to wipe the smirk off
of his face, he remembered that he needed to maintain the façade. He had a role
to play. And a lot depended on his ability to continue acting according to
expectations.
He still had to save Delilah.
“I was just thinking about how you
just walked right up to that… guy in back. You’re… smart and brave. It’s a rare
combination. I never mastered the whole bravery thing.” Tom said. He hoped he
sold that one. It was complete bullshit, unctuousness as its finest. He leaned
against the car door, trying to keep the position of the door handle in his
mind’s eye.
Octavio turned, giving him a look. He
nodded. Turning the key in the ignition, he chuckled at his own private joke. Shaking
his head, he focused on the parking lot.
The
glaring Texas sun bullied them with insolent madness. The car had been resting
in a swath of shade, and the minute they backed up, the interior of the vehicle
grew warmer by several degrees. Tom felt his dirty shirt clinging to his skin.
Rivulets of sweat poured down his side. He looked around, suddenly thirsty. He
saw a bottle of water on the floor of the backseat behind him. “May I have
that?” he asked, nodding towards the small plastic bottle with the blue label.
Jake
smirked. He hesitated, just long enough to communicate the message that he
could refuse to help the escaped convict out. Then he shrugged, unbuckled his
seat belt, and grabbed the bottle, tossing it in one smooth motion to Tom.
Tom almost
didn’t catch it. He bobbled the pass, but ultimately succeeded in avoiding an
embarrassing miss. He twisted the white cap and drank the stale water. It
didn’t taste good or even really quench his thirst, but at least he was a
little hydrated. Looking out the window, he watched as the many cars passed by
in a slow blur. They rounded the corner and merged into the mass of traffic
immersed in its morning commute. Octavio turned on the radio, flipping through
channels until finally settling on some Mexican-style music.
“Why?”
Tom said. He hadn’t meant to speak the word. He almost raised a hand to cover
his mouth when he realized he actually had.
Octavio
turned slightly and raised an eyebrow, but didn’t say anything. He waited.
“Why
what?” he finally asked.
Tom
scratched his chin. He hunched his shoulders and tried to focus on the bright
skyline of the bustling heart of south Texas. Soon, all of this would be…
desolation. He wondered about that. He tried to visualize it, but garish images
of amputate bodies and that person jumping off of the balcony….
“Why are
you doing all of this? The… whatever it is you’re going to do with the rabies?”
“Do you
really want to know? Would it make things easier for you?” Octavio asked. He
sounded genuinely curious.
“I don’t
know.” Tom replied. “I’m not sure anything can make what I’ve already been
through easier. It’d be nice to have Delilah and Mike back. Delilah especially.
But, part of me feels guilty. Not just for dragging them into this whole
situation, but even… healing them may not be best.” Tom said. He laughed. “Did
you know her dad apparently has a whole lot of money. As in billions, with a
B?” Tom asked.
“I know.”
Octavio said.
“What was
the point of taking her arm off, anyway?” Tom asked.
“See how
she reacted.” Octavio said.
They were
stuck in a slow line of traffic that barely moved. The enthusiastic man on the
radio was droning on about politics, lambasting the current president with a
creative harangue that bordered on the comically insane. Octavio reached out
and turned the volume down, though he did not change the station. “The roads
won’t be usable. Or safe.” He remarked idly, eyes ahead.
“Huh?”
Tom asked.
“Oh.”
Octavio chuckled. “I was… tomorrow, the roads probably won’t be usable.”
“So, what
sort of reactions were you expecting? I mean, you said you dealt with amputees
a lot, right? As part of your research or whatever?” Tom persisted.
“Yeah.
The Army sees a lot of missing limbs. We deal with that and bleeding. Probably
the two biggest things. Missing limbs are much more significant outside of
combat zones, of course. People didn’t generally bleed much when I actually saw
them.” Octavio said.
“Do you
like it? Hurting people? Killing?” Tom asked.
“Yes.”
Octavio responded.
That one
gave Tom chills. “Jesus.” He muttered.
“I was
not alone, Thomas. I was acting under orders. We wanted to see if the drug had
any impact on things like recovery times. We were checking sleep deprivation,
etc. One of the primary things we were wanting to see was epidemiology. We
still don’t understand how exactly it spreads. We have a number of modified
genomes. It took quite a bit of work to effectively transmit the virus through
the air. That’s a lot of saliva.” He chuckled. “Adsorption is also a problem. Anyway,
we were at least partly trying to determine the how the virus could be spread
from original hosts, and how long the symptoms would take to develop.”
“I
thought you said symptoms show up in 9 days.” Tom said.
“They
usually do. But, what happens after the symptoms show? What happens while they
are infected?” Octavio asked rhetorically.
“Did you
learn the answers?” Tom asked.
“Not
fully.” Octavio answered.
Then they
heard a scream.
Chapter 14
Their hostage
was awake.
“Helpppp!”
he screamed.
“Tranquilizers
must have worn off.” Octavio said. “When we get to fifteenth, we’ll pull over.
Can you take sure of him, Jake?” Octavio asked. He glanced in the rearview
mirror and raised one eyebrow.
“Happily.”
Jake responded.
Tom
leaned his head against the warm glass, sweat still slithering down his spine,
and wondered if this would ever end. Life seemed like a garish tableau. An
endless game of ever-inventive mind fucks designed to drive him as close to, but
not over, the berm of insanity as possible. He listened to the overly
enthusiastic radio announcer and drifted away into a sea of his own noxious
thought.
Looking
outside at the world slowly passing by, he saw shopping centers and moms with
strollers. People with bare feet in sandals smiling and walking along as if
they didn’t have a care in the world. All sorts of festive red-white-and-blue
banners adorned the walls and windows of the various establishments. The
grocery stores advertised hot dogs and soda at half price, trying to get people
off their phones and in the door.
Last
Independence Day, Tom had been in Denver. He’d been deep into the investigative
journey that would prove to be his ultimate downfall. Looking into corrupt
editors at the nation’s largest newspapers, trying to ferret out the evidence
that corroborated what he already knew. Tom wanted to feel guilty, sorry for
the man wailing in the back. He probably had kids. The guy almost certainly
maintained the righteous self-assuredness that is the hallmark characteristic
of the smug assholes who run much of the media. At one point or another, he’d
probably even done some really good things and helped some truly unfortunate
souls.
Yet, the
man had been sent here for one specific reason: to get Tom. Tom wasn’t sure if
the man himself was supposed to be the one to kill him, but there could be no
doubt that the nefarious forces in power wanted him dead. They’d gone to great
lengths to frame him for mass murder, so it was obvious what lengths they would
go to to maintain their secrets and protect their cabal.
They had
set up a shooting at an art gallery, for God’s sake.
These
people were willing to do anything.
These
meandering musings lead Tom to a question he didn’t quite want to face, but
knew he had to. And soon. If the people wielding their power as if they were
appointed arbiters by divine decree were so evil, why, then, would it be so bad
if they lost that power?
Tom
looked outside. He didn’t feel sorry for the schmuck in the back of the SUV. He
couldn’t. But, he did feel sympathy for the pawns walking around outside,
blissfully unaware in the dry Texas heat. Not even sympathy. Empathy. He was a pawn, too. He was used
to being used.
His only
solace, as he glanced over at the relaxed posture of the evil doctor who’d made
him an accomplice to mass murder, was that soon, he could do the using.
They
pulled over into an abandoned Valero station. The faded white walls of the
small station had been covered in layers of competing blue and red graffiti. There
were pitchforks and stars, names written in ornate cursive, lots of numbers.
Tom looked at the boarded windows, the sad beige slats of wood a testament to
the entropy that assails us all over time. A greasy fast food wrapper did
cartwheels across the dusty black pavement, finally collapsing next to a patch
of mangy-looking brown grass by the edge of the busy road. Tom could see a few
used condoms on the asphalt, as well as what appeared to be a syringe.
Jake got
out, leaving the back passenger-side door open as he walked calmly around to
the back of the vehicle. He opened the hatch. A quick, ugly thud, like the
sound of meat being tenderized, and the piercing screams that had torn through
Tom’s curious conversation with the mad scientist were stifled. Having quiet
restored seemed odd, after several minutes of trying to block out the horrid
wailing of their hostage. Tom turned to look, and saw the enigmatic mercenary
rummaging through a small bag. The assassin plucked out a small syringe. He
inserted the needle, then plunged it into the soft skin of the hogtied man in
the back.
“All set.
Should be good for another hour, at least.” Jake said, returning to his seat.
They
merged back into traffic, Octavio humming a familiar tune. He drummed his
academic’s fingers on the steering wheel as he bobbed his head with the poor
tune.
Tom tried
to ignore it. He looked outside at the passing buildings. The sun glinted in
his eyes. Blinking, he turned and tried to focus on the weird announcer on the
radio. “May I change the station?” Tom finally asked, his voice hesitant. He
avoided looking at Octavio.
“Sure.
Just no rock music, please. I’m not a fan. Get’s my blood pressure up.” Octavio
said.
Tom
laughed. He couldn’t help it. He rocked forward, spit flying out of his mouth.
He made an involuntary movement with both hands, as if trying in vain to catch
the minute droplets ejected out of his oral orifice. Tears streamed down his
cheeks. He tried to stop, but a new fit of laughter followed directly on the
heels of the first one. He fought to catch his breath.
“What’s
so funny?” Octavio asked, a thin, stern frown slicing across his austere face.
The irony
of the brilliant doctor not understanding… the irony of the moment only served
to elicit a new wave of mirth. Tom reached out and grabbed his belly. He was
moving from side to side, his body wracking with the force of his gales.
It was
only after he remembered the time just outside the diner, after the shooting
that had helped instigate this bizarre expedition, that Tom was able to gain
some marginal amount of control over himself. He focused on his inhalations.
Counting in his head, he got to six sets of breaths before he thought he had
some capacity to speak without relapsing. The laughter seemed to be a dangerous
drug. Tom needed to be as sober-minded as possible at the moment.
“I just…
remembered something.” Tom said. He tried to hide the smile that wanted to play
upon his lips.
“Care to
share what that something was?” Octavio asked.
“Not
really, if that’s okay.” Tom said.
Octavio
grunted. “Fine. Just no rock.” He said.
Tom tuned
the station to classical, something which the doctor seemed to like. Octavio
nodded his head and drummed his fingers on the steering wheel. Tom sat back
against the seat, tense. He felt an acute awareness of the dangerous, even
lethal presence behind him. Tom closed his eyes. His stomach was in knots.
Everything in his body felt overwhelmed.
They
turned. Tom opened his eyes and looked out. The heavy traffic and commercial
buildings gave way to a long line of quaint ranch-style houses. Puffy white
clouds hovered listlessly in the cerulean sea above. It seemed like such a
relaxed, homely neighborhood. Almost the quintessential picture of America
domesticity. Bikes sat in the manicured front yards. Garages remained open,
revealing men working on cars or with tools inside. A few women sat on a wooden
bench, talking with smiles on their faces as kids played a few feet away.
Tom
reflected on this. These people, they couldn’t know the horrible evil that
would befall them shortly. Their imminent demise rested in his hands. Tom
realized something as he sat there watching them as they faded away into the
triptych, the blurred tableau of his recent past: he kind of liked having that
sort of power.
Even if
it came by proxy. He knew he, in the end, didn’t have any significant power.
Not when compared to the mental strength of the doctor of the physical prowess
of the assassin sitting behind him. Yet, the knowledge he carried within
himself was of sufficient strength that it could ruin lives.
Tom
smiled. He closed his eyes again. The man in the back had traveled all of this
way, just to get him for the things he knew. But, the things he’d learned since
their first unsuccessful attempt to destroy him had given him the sanctuary he
needed to survive. He began to understand that his power seemed to be in
ferreting out information from the powerful. It was a dangerous game, but it
was one he needed to start consciously playing to win.
They’d
already proven what lengths they were willing to go to.
No more
journalistic integrity. Would there even be journalism after the apocalypse?
Tom followed this tangent as he again drifted off into a sort of semi-sleep
state.
He woke
up when a hand weighed down on his shoulder. “Get up. Get in the back.” Octavio
said.
Tom shook
his head. His eyelids felt heavy. He looked back towards the hatch. Then,
without a word, he exited the vehicle, going around, accompanied by Jake, to
the desired location. He assumed the fetal position once on the floor, lying
next to the defiled, unconscious man. A long, chunky wave of dried vomit sat on
the square of black carpet on the floor.
The door
slammed shut and darkness reigned.
Trying to
retrace his steps in his mind’s eye, Tom recalled that he’d been forced into
the back at what appeared to be the end of a narrow cul-de-sac. He obviously
had just woken up and hadn’t had much time to allow his gaze to longer.
Nonetheless, he’d seen a broad patch of high, wilted grass behind him as he was
practically marched to his hiding spot in the brief moment of time he’d been
given. He reflected on that. Why would they stop in a residential area to
unload him into his place of concealment? Tom went through a list of probable
option in his mind. It took him a few minutes of deep pondering to compile the
mental list, given his lack of knowledge of criminal affairs. He’d never really
hidden anything in his life. His mother had always told him he’d been horrible
at keeping secrets.
He smiled
when he settled on an answer. It felt like a small victory. An epiphany,
perhaps. They’d done the deed there because of the paucity of cameras.
Tom’s
giddiness at his own growing capacity for cunning evaporated into a hissing
mist fast, however. For on its heels came the realization that he wouldn’t be
able to ask Octavio to confirm his hypothesis.
The car
bounced on the road. It must have hit a pothole. Tom grunted, landing back on
the rough floor, his face scraping the frayed fabric of the black carpet. His
mouth felt dry. He was suddenly thirsty. His heart flew through his chest as if
it had been gifted a new jetpack for the holidays. He could feel himself
starting to panic, and he tried to breathe.
The
prisoner beside him shifted. Tom squealed, an involuntary expulsion of sound
that ricocheted throughout the tight confines of the back seat.
A thick
blanket covered him. It trapped the heat emanating from his body and made Tom
feel claustrophobic. He wanted to sit up, to yell. A dark desire to pummel this
man with his fists until he died descended upon him, and Tom stared with baleful
eyes at the inert creature proximate to him. It’s all your fault. Tom thought.
Sliding
over, he reached one hand out and felt around on the man’s soiled jeans. The
guy had crapped himself. Tom didn’t smell it, but when he felt the heaviness
bundled inside the man’s soiled jeans, he gagged. He felt himself go pale.
After a few seconds, he wrestled his revulsion into a choke hold and got it to
submit. Returning to his investigation, hindered by circumstance, he
nonetheless soon discovered a tell-tale bump in one back pocket.
Extracting
the item, he saw that it was, as suspected, a wallet. Thin brown leather with
the letters GUM burned into the material, it was laden with stuff. Tom opened
it. Inside, he found a wad of money, mostly small bills, but a few hundreds as
well. Tom wasn’t interested in that. He plucked the thick plastic laminated
identification card from its slot. Gerald Umberto Martinez. He fought the urge
to chuckle. What a weird name. Tom
thought.
The name
didn’t exactly ring any alarms at first. But, yet, it seemed vaguely familiar.
Like the lingering scent of a high-school romance gone awry.
They hit
another bump.
That
ended Tom’s fascination with the man’s identity. His anxiety levels rose to
such a high degree that he collapsed onto the floor, trying to get his face as
close as he could to the back hatch. He gulped in stale air. Closing his eyes,
he pictured himself far away. He slowly calmed down.
The car
slowed to a near halt. The sounds swirling around the exterior of the vehicle
were different. Tom opened his eyes. He thought they were back at the base,
which meant he should be getting out from under this blanket soon. Tom fought
the urge to move or say anything. Sensing the imminence of his release, Tom got
excited again. Though this was a different sort of tension, it still wreaked
havoc on his over-stimulated consciousness. His body threatened to revolt, and
he once again closed his eyes, picturing a distant, idyllic landscape.
It was at
this moment, concealed under a blanket with a criminal sent to kill him, that
Tom realized the setting he pictured in his mind’s eye to entice the calm was
from the painting created by his new and unlikely friend: Mike.
He heard
muffled voices. None of them sounded angry or agitated. Just normal people
doing their business. Even so, it seemed like the exchange took an inordinately
long time. What are they waiting on?! Tom
wondered. The man beside him, Gerald, began to mutter. The hostage’s legs
twitched. He appeared as if he were waking up, as if the effects of whatever
narcotic drug he’d been administered were waning.
Tom couldn’t
panic. He told himself not to panic.
But he
panicked anyway.
His heart
fluttered like the wings of a distressed pigeon. His vision blurred at the
edges. His body felt clammy and overcome by a thick, slick sweat that covered
him like an oozing, living coat of evil chainmail.
He suffocated the nascent scream
that bounced against the walls of his throat, desperately trying to make its
escape. Tom trembled. He clenched his eyes shut so hard, tears again streamed
down his face. He clenched his fists and held them tight against his mouth,
biting down at one point on them hard enough to draw blood.
Finally, after what seemed an
eternity, the car slowly lurched forward and began moving into the base.
Towards the residence of the Major who would soon unleash all manner of
unspeakable evil upon the world.
Chapter 15
Their
hostage was awake.
He
screamed when they pulled him from the back of the vehicle. Jake slapped a hand
over his mouth to stifle the screams, looking anxiously about as he carried the
front half of the man towards the open door. The long line of houses seemed
bereft of people. The peaceful quiet and calm that seemed to permeate even the
air in these environs was undisturbed by this momentary breach.
Tom took
several minutes getting out of the car. His limbs felt stiff. He got up, but
his back hurt. Painful pulses of pain rippled through him. It felt like tiny
daggers were stabbing his legs. He grunted and groaned for an audience of none
as he got up and hobbled out of the vehicle. Seeing no one else around, he
reached up and slammed the hatch shut.
He went
inside. Delilah and Mike still remained in the same respective positions on the
couches. Perhaps Mike had a little more saliva on his chin, but other than
that, they really did look blissfully oblivious to the external reality around
them. Seeing that his nefarious companions were not in the room, Tom shut the
front door and went to Delilah. He bent down low, listening to her steady,
shallow breathing. She was alive.
He heaved
a sigh of relief. That was perhaps the best news he could hope for under these
bizarre circumstances. Creeping over to Mike, as if somehow he might disturb
their catatonia, he leaned forward. He grimaced. The man’s breath smelled
horrible. Like he’d been munching on prolapsed hobbit buttholes as part of some
new fad diet.
But, Mike
was alive.
Tom
looked around. The house was quiet. That kind of disturbed him. He didn’t want the residence to be quiet. He
wanted there to be terrified, agonized appeals for divine mercy, for terror and
outrage to echo through the halls and shake the foundations of the edifice.
But, instead, life went on with the same banality. Everything looked the same,
except Tom knew different.
Walking
into the kitchen, he opened a few wooden cupboards until he found a glass
tumbler. He opened up the faucet and poured himself a glass of cold water.
Drinking, he felt relieved. Tom couldn’t remember water ever tasting so good.
He looked around. Seeing a speck of dirt on the white tiled floor leading into
the hallway, Tom figured that this was a clue. The doctor had everything else
in the hacienda-style home in careful order. Octavio possessed all of the
classic hallmarks of a control freak. Thus, this tiny bit of dirt seemed quite
out of place.
Walking
slowly on the balls of his feet, Tom tingled with anticipation. He didn’t know
what he would find, but he expected dangers lurking around every corner. With
each step, he paused. Down the hallway, there were a few doors. One of them
remained partially open. Going to it, Tom nudged the thick wooden door with one
foot. It opened with a slight creak. A set of rickety, frail old wooden stairs
led down into a well of darkness.
Tom
hesitated on the threshold. Did he really want to go down? He swayed as he
stood staring into the seemingly impenetrable sea of blackness that swallowed
the stairs.
He heard something. Tensing, he
looked around. His pulse pounded in his head. The sound emanating from the dark
abyss below disturbed him. Yet, Tom couldn’t tell exactly why.
A mix between mewling and incoherent
groveling, almost. Tom allowed his gaze to linger on the entryway leading back
into the relative safety and quiet of the living room. He wanted to retreat. He
desperately desired to cover his ears and flee the oppressive noise drifting up
from the moist air below. The sound… reminded him of something.
Tom defied his better judgement,
betraying the clarion clamoring in the back of his brain. He moved forward in a
crouch, holding one hand out as if his trembling fingers would somehow help him
ward off any invisible foes. He hesitated, shaking, his eyes jittery and his
body slick with sweat. Then he reached past the doorway, finding a thin, narrow
wooden railing. He gripped it. Slowly, slowly, ever so slowly, he stepped onto
the stairway’s landing.
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