Redaction: Melt Down, Chapter 4 (unedited)

Chapter Four

“I think a see a miracle at eleven o’clock.” Using the face of a clock to define position, Papa Rose spoke into the mic dangling in front of his mouth like a overfed blowfly. Easing up on the gas, he swerved the Harley Davidson around the corpse sitting next to an abandoned Honda. Lucky bastard. Imagine just sitting down and dying like that.

Some people had all the luck.

“Roger that, Papa Rose.” On the motorcycle next to him, Falcon nodded. Lightning glinted on the ex-Ranger’s ebony helmet. Instead of covering his mouth, his yellow bandanna fluttered against his black neck. “Looks like Santa came early.”

One the seat behind Falcon, Brainiac lowered his face mask before adjusting his mic. “A tanker should keep Palo Verde running until we can join Doc and the others in the safety of the mountains.”

More than enough. Unfortunately, Papa Rose had hoped to buy a one way ticket to ground zero. God needed to stop fucking with his plans.

He hopped the curb and drove down the sidewalk. The semi’s cab tilted down the entrance to a gas station several blocks away. Hoods of cars, vans and trucks aimed at it. The stubble on his bald head stood on end.

Brainiac’s panting came over the wire. He raised the M-4 off his lap, ready to aim left or right. “Anyone else’s oh shit meter pinging?”

Papa Rose scanned the area. Right to left. Left to right. Smoke crept between the open spaces, not thick enough to hide anything. Rats waddled along the debris trimming the storefronts. Car doors remained shut. Windows were rolled up. Interiors were empty. “Where are the tan and browns?”

Bodies decomposed on every corner and street. Every one but this one. That just wasn’t natural.

“Fuck.” Falcon swore softly as they wove through the congestion. “Should we abort?”

Abort? They taken this mission to ensure they died. But…shit. What had been the point of his surviving his wife and kids if he died in an ambush. “Hell no!”

“We need that gas to keep the generators running. Four days.” Brainiac eyed the rooftops, the muzzle of his weapon tracked his progress. “Doc just needs four days.”

Doc. A woman who they’d met once, right before they’d volunteered for this mission. She’d given the survivors hope. And she counted on them. Today was not a good day to die. “I’ll take point.”

Papa Rose added enough gas to dart in the front. The extended front wheel ate up the distance and the throbbing of the engine echoed off the store fronts lining the street. Vertical blinds rattled in the empty window panes. Papers rustled in the gutter. A cool breeze carried the scent of smoky water.

His gaze shifted right then left. Back and forth, to and fro. There had to be some evidence of what had gone down here, of where the people went. His attention dropped to the asphalt. No blood puddled under the trunks. Was it possible they had simply walked away?

A hundred feet from the corner, he eased between a Dodge caravan and a Ford pick-up. He took his hand from the handlebar and skimmed the hood as he passed. “It’s cool.”

“The others were as well.” Falcon confirmed.

The information was paltry and could be lethally misleading if they put too much stock in it. They didn’t know the order the cars had arrived. Papa Rose zig-zagged around the nose of a sedan then a coupe. One more lane of traffic to go. The wind kicked up, tugged at his denim jacket.

“Still looks clear,” Brainiac whispered.

“This has to be the end of the world. We have a squid for lookout.” Falcon muttered. “You’re not looking for rocks, are you Brainiac?”

“Or icebergs.” He joined in the hazing as his front wheel cleared the cars. His heart raced and his palms sweated against the handlebars. The dark glass face of the convenience store stared back at him. What lucked in the interior?

“Actually I was looking at how high the swells are,” Brainiac shot back. “Too bad I didn’t bring my surfboard.”

His tire bumped over the curve. He quickly glanced up at the awning over the pumps. No one peered back. He pulled alongside the tanker and stopped. The engine throbbed between his thighs. His reflection stared back from the shiny tank.

Gravel crunched as Falcon parked behind him.

He killed the engine. After nearly two hours of the hog drumming in his head, the silence nearly knocked his legs out from under him. A breeze stirred the grand opening banner draped from the red and yellow eaves. His nose twitched at the stench of death and the hair on his arms stood up.

He knew what black and tans smelled like long before the Redaction hit.

“I think I know where the people are.” Hooking the kickstand with his boot, he set it down and lowered the bike’s weight onto it. He tugged the Glock from his waistband and nodded toward the double glass doors at the front of the store.

Brainiac hopped off the bike. His finger settled next to the trigger. “I think there’s only black and tans sunning themselves.” He jerked his chin in the direction of the North-bound lane. One lane had been cleared–enough for a stream of cars to get through.

Falcon’s eyes narrowed. He dismounted and fingered the weapons hanging on his belt. Bypassing the knives and machete, he removed a Sig-Sauer. “Give me a status on the tanker, B.”

“Aye.” Brainiac spun on his heel. Keeping alert, he approached the semi.

Keeping the tank at his back, Falcon inched toward the back. The white wall of the building next to the gas station covered their flank–provided no one was on the roof.

But would they risk blowing up the precious fuel to get to them?

Maybe they’d emptied it and stored the barrels inside. Papa Rose stepped toward the convenience store.

“Negative, Papa.” Falcon’s voice swirled inside his ear. “Hang tight.”

He retreated and watched the action from his peripheral vision.

“I”m going up.” Brainiac hitched his weapon over his shoulder, set one foot on the bumper and grabbed the rungs welded to the back of the tank. Metal creaked as it adjusted to his full weight.

“That can’t be good.” A full load would be heavy, certainly heavier than Brainiac who could be carrying a fifty pound sack of flour and still weigh nearly nothing. Damn. This pit stop could be a waste of precious time

“Yeah, I think she’s empty.” Brainiac balanced on top of the cylinder and hunched over as he walked toward the cab. “Notice how hollow my footsteps sound.”

Falcon shook his head. “You keep that racket up and anyone within ten clicks of us will hear. Do you even know what you’re doing?”

“Hell no.” Brainiac grinned at them before crouching low. Metal ground together. “I’m improvising. Isn’t that what you special forces cock-suckers admire?”

Papa Rose coughed over his laugh. Even squid have teeth.

“You’re gonna admire my boot up your ass if your caterwauling gets me shot.” Falcon kicked a rock in his direction. “Stop laughing.”

“I thought you said you barely knew the runt?” The stone skipped over the asphalt and thudded to a stop against Papa Rose’s worn steel-toed work boot. Dots studded the blacktop. Soon the smell of wet asphalt competed with the stench of decay.

Metal clanged together, echoing around the belly of the tanker.

“Empty, just like I thought.” Brainiac straightened and dusted his hands. “Maybe we shouldn’t have driven through the side streets. We might have had better luck looking for a full truck on the interstate.”

Maybe, but there was no point in second guessing themselves. They were almost out of Tolleson and soon they’d be on the open road and could look there. “My momma told me never to crash a party without a gift, and I don’t intend to disappoint her.”

And if they didn’t find any gas between the western suburbs of Phoenix and Palo Verde, well then, they were just going there to piss in the wind.

Brainiac hooked his hand around the handle arcing over the top of the tanker. “Your momma tell you what goes with radioactive fondue?”

“Get your fool ass down here.” Falcon shoved up the visor of his helmet.

“Aye, aye.” Brainiac climbed down faster than a monkey from a tree. With his wiry build, he resembled one too. His heels rapped loudly against the silence when he jumped the rest of the way to the ground.

Falcon swore. “Keep it up and we’re gonna get holes punched in our asses.”

The skin between Papa Rose’s shoulder blades itched. Could someone be watching them from behind the tinted glass? He inched closer to the double doors. Only one way to find out. “Anyone want a Slim Jim?”

Squaring his shoulders, Falcon swung his gaze to the convenience store before nodding once. “How many do you think you can get?”

So the other soldier felt it too. Good to know his spider senses weren’t misfiring. He shoved up his rain spotted visor. “Won’t know until I enter.”

Falcon’s finger slipped onto the trigger. “I got a powerful craving. Stand watch, B.”

Cradling his M-4, Brainiac strode to the motorcycles. “I’d like some chips if you can find any.”

“Sure thing.” Was the kid dense or buying into the game? Papa Rose waited until Falcon fell into position behind him before walking toward the door. Anyone with a lick of sense would recognize it as an offensive position. Still, there was a chance civilians cowered in the dark interior.

He stepped onto the shiny green landing in front of the store, turned his body to make a smaller target then reached for the handle. His fingers across the wet surface before finding purchase then he yanked it open.

The door swung out silently.

Death perfume rolled out along of the opening.

Papa Rose swallowed the bile rising in his throat. Maybe he’d discarded his face mask prematurely.

Lightning flashed in the west, shooting rays of light into the gloom. Empty white shelves protruded like bleached bones from the mass of bodies tossed three and four deep on the floor. Dark stained pockmarks marred one wall. Broken glass glittered like diamonds across jackets and spilled hair.

“Looks like they were herded inside then shot.” Falcon stepped over the out stretched arm of one man and found an empty place next to his head.

“Not all at once.” Locking the door open, He shifted aside an empty potato chip bag before placing his weight on his leg. “Some are stiff.” He pointed with his weapon to the pale, stiff fingers reaching for the blood-spattered ceiling then to the fat woman whose rolls oozed around her limp body and leaked fluids. “Others have been here a while.”

The newcomers would have learned their fate too late to prevent it.

“Should we check to see if any are alive?”

Hell no. Lifeless eyes stared back at him, accused him from death masks etched in pain and fear. Thunder rumbled down the street and rattled the windows. Right, if he wanted to get into heaven and see his wife and kids, he’d better earn it. “I’ll take the right.”

Falcon nodded.

Sliding his finger off the trigger, he crouched down and poked the doughy neck of the nearest body. OneMississippi. TwoMississippi. Three–

A loud thump came from deep within the store.

He shot to his feet, aiming his gun at the swinging doors near the brain studded hot dog carousel. His heart hammered his chest. A few controlled breaths calmed his thoughts. “Could be a rat.”

Falcon crept toward a blood smeared end cap. “What and avoid this smorgasbord?”

Yeah, his thoughts were messed up. But dammit why did he have to keep shooting people when most were going to die anyway? How the hell was he supposed to work off the body count he had already accumulated when he kept adding to it? He’d never reunite with his family this way.

Falcon directed their assault with one hand.

Papa Rose’s finger returned to the trigger. Guess they were going in. Hunkering down, he set on boot on the cadaver’s belly. Gingerly, he shifted his weight onto it. It collapsed in a burst of stink just as he lifted his heel. His teeth clattered and his ankle wobbled as his sole hit the spine.

Falcon’s nose wrinkled in disgust. “Ribs, dip shit.”

Excuse him. He’d never used corpses as stepping stones before. Shaking the tepid goo off his boot, he aimed for the next body’s chest.

“There’s ribs in there?” Brainiac buzzed in his ear like an annoying insect. “Damn, I’m hungry.”

He closed his eyes and shifted his weight. Please don’t splat. Please don’t burst. After a brief wobble, it firmed. The next one shifted as the one underneath it gave way. They’re not people; they’re stones. Stepping stones. Breathing through his mouth, he crept down the aisle. His brain short-circuited, neutralizing his taste buds, planting him firmly in the moment but not the charnel house.

Sweat stung his eyes. Rain pattered the pavement, hissing as it hit. Lightning exploded in the sky and thunder soon followed. He increased his speed, leaving the stones almost as soon as they began to shift. If they waited too long, the storm would disguise the actions of whoever lay beyond those doors.

Falcon stood to the side, out of sight of the glass panes in the black doors, waiting.

Finally, he lowered his foot to the brown linoleum. Two refrigerator cases stretched between him and his target. The tacky blood stuck to his heels when he inched forward but at least his boots didn’t squeak.

The double doors exploded outward with a scream.

A very human scream. The world slowed down as he processed everything at once. A dark shadow cleared the threshold. The doors banged against one wall and Falcon. The impact knocked his weapon off target. A bullet slammed into the racks, spraying metal chips in the air.

Papa Rose raised his gun.

The shadow threw itself against the door holding the other soldier.

Fuck! If he shot, he’d hit Falcon. Muscle coiled around bone and he sprang forward.

Lightning cracked the darkness, illuminating the fear on the kid’s face. Wide blue eyes stared back at him. Dried blood glued the hair to the side of her head.

It’s a kid. The thought skimmed his consciousness just as he tackled her. Twisting at the last minute, he bore the brunt of the impact with the door. The rubber gave just a bit but the crash rattled out his bones.

Falcon’s groan transmitted across the wire.

“Do you need back-up? Brainiac’s question swirled inside his head.

He wrapped his arms around the squirming kid, slithering up and down his body while her heels played his shins like a xylophone. “It’s okay, kid. You’re safe.”

She answered him with a jab in the gut.

“Kid? What kid?” Brainiac spat into his skull.

The door shoved against his spine and he and the kid slid along the floor with the grace of a sidewinder.

“I’ll kill you! I’ll kill you!”

“Hold your position, B!” Falcon’s scream overrode the girl’s threats. “Get the kid under control, Papa.”

“We’re not going to hurt you.” He rolled, pinning her under him.

Her bones, as fragile as a hummingbird’s, shuddered. Once. Twice. A third time. Finally, she lay still. “Don’t hurt me. Please. Don’t hurt me.”

Christ Jesus. What had she been through? A body, decaying inches from her nose, told the story.

“We’re not here to hurt anyone.” Falcon squatted next to her bare feet. “We’re here to help.”

“Help?” She blinked.

He rolled off her. Close enough to contain her, but far enough to give her a little space. “Yes. We’re soldiers.”

She turned her head and stared at him, a wild animal gauging the threat in the darkness.

“You’re safe now.” Lowering his gun to the side, Falcon reached into his pocket and withdrew a packet of cookies. He held them out to her. “We’re going to keep you safe.”

She stared at it for a moment. Her hand shook as she reached for it.

From fear or starvation? He clenched his jaw shut. Not that it mattered. The cookies would hold her until he got a Meals-Ready-to-Eat warmed up for her. The skinny thing needed food and they had extra.

Falcon smiled and dropped it into her waiting hand. His teeth gleamed white against his black skin. “Is there anyone else hiding in the back?”

She paused before biting the package. The corner dangled from her teeth when she ripped it open. She spit it on the ground then dumped the cookies into her palm. One by one, she divvied them up.

Papa closed his eyes for a moment. There was another survivor.

“Toby, you can come out now.” Once done yelling, she popped half in her mouth then fisted the other and pushed to her feet.

He turned to see a toddler dragging a teddy bear emerge from the stockroom. “Daddy?”

Air froze in his lungs. His son Patrick had sounded just like that.

“No, not Daddy.” The girl stumbled over an outstretch hand before reaching the toddler. “Soldiers. They brought cookies.” She cupped his hand and poured his share into it. “See?”

“I yike cookies.”

Falcon cleared his throat and sniffed. “You know what this means, don’t you?”

Yeah, their plans for a one-way trip just crumbled. No way could they have a weenie roast over a nuclear fire when they had kids to get to safety. “I can take ’em on my bike.”

He’d done it before. His fingers curled into fists. This time he wouldn’t fail. Please, God. Don’t force him to ink another rose onto his arm. He was already fully sleeved.

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The view out the window

We drove back from Colorado through the Navajo Reservation. It was the same way we drove going to Colorado but this time we saw something new out the window.

Does anyone else see a Sleestak in the picture? I think it is the round part that makes it look like an eyeball.

If you don’t know what one is check out this link:

http://landofthelost.wikia.com/wiki/Sleestak

If you’re traveling out west, this is near Kayenta Arizona the gateway to Monument Valley of western fame. We stopped there at a Burger King because they had a collection about the Navajo Code Talkers during WWII. It was very cool, so was the museum that was next to it.

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Redaction: Melt Down, Chapter 3, unedited

 

Chapter  Three

“You’re relieving me of command?” Mavis Spanner’s gut clenched. No. This couldn’t be happening. She been working when her son was killed inAfghanistan. She’d gone to the office to file a report when her husband died. Now, when her stupid job had a chance to save the life of someone she loved, this jar-head threatened to take it away.

“I have to consider it.” Across the bench seat of the Humvee, General Lister tapped on the screen of his laptop. The blue light of the screen tarnished the United States Marine Corps insignia on his collar.

“Why? She’d worked despite being infected with anthrax. She’d stared at reports until her eyes burned and the information blurred. She coughed into the crook of her arm. With each spasm, her diaphragm shrink-wrapped her gut around her ribs, squeezing air out of her lungs with a high-pitched whistle. God, it hurt to breathe, to blink, to think. What more could they want from her?

What more did she have to give?

“You’re obviously sick.”

Ending her coughing jag on a wheeze, she stuck her hands into her pockets. Empty throat lozenge wrappers rained like confetti on the dark upholstery. She raked her fingers through the garbage. Surely, there would be one left. Please God, let there be one left. “Practically everyone is sick.”

Billions of anthrax spores swirled in the air, clung to people’s clothes and stuck to people’s shoes.

“What makes me so special that I get relieved of duty?” If she knew, then she could find a solution to stay in her position. Her niece needed her to stay in her position. She skimmed a hard knot in her pocket, stopped and delved deeper in the detritus then came up with a foil wrapped wad of gum. Damn it! A tickle skimmed her throat before she started coughing again. The graphics on her tablet computer swam as her eyes teared up. Hacking up a lung would be so much easier.

General Lister glanced at her over the top of his wire-rimmed reading glasses. The slim silver earpieces pointed directly to his graying temples. “The Sergeant-Major and his handful of Army flunkies tell me you haven’t gotten more than a couple of hours sleep in the last two days.”

Sighing, Mavis collapsed against the seat. Her attention darted to the driver’s seat of the Humvee. Sergeant-Major David Dawson winked at her in the rear view mirror. Her Sergeant-Major as the general damn well knew. She straightened. Wait just a New York minute. “You’ve had my… men spy on me?”

Her lover spied on her? She rubbed her sternum, hoping to ease the ache building under the bone. Where was his loyalty?

“In case you haven’t noticed, Doc, the shit has already hit the fan.” Lister ripped off his glasses and chewed on the earpiece. “And now we’re being sucked into the downdraft, ready to be chopped into bits by the blades.”

And how exactly did that justify David’s betrayal? Her gaze shifted to the floor. “And the Sergeant-Major and his men are now the judges of good health and competency?”

Sure, David and his men were practically the only ones healthy since their commanding officer hadn’t shared the anthrax tainted toys. Not that the asshole had known of the biological attack at the time. The CO had been too busy lining his own pockets by selling the meals and toys Burgers in a Basket had churned out to thank the military, government officials, police, fire and healthcare workers.

And all those toy baggies had spilled their grams of anthrax masquerading as desiccant into the air, exposing everyone who breathed to the disease. She and her niece had been at one of several thousands of ground zeroes around the world. Now, she was infected and her niece, her sole remaining relative, was dying.

“Hell, the Army is competent to judge their assholes.” Lister snorted before coughing into his handkerchief. Moments passed before he wiped his mouth and tucked the square of embroidered linen in his uniform pocket. “Putting the Army in charge of anything explains why we’ve gone barely ten miles in two hours. Isn’t that right, Sergeant-Major?”

“Yes, Sir.” The vehicle swayed side-to-side as David maneuvered it out of the wash and onto hard packed dirt running next to it. The Humvee slowed to a crawl as they approached the paved road.

Men. She resisted the urge to throw up her hands and smack some sense into him. As the jar head knew, the moved slowly to pick up survivors along the evacuation route. His nonsense wouldn’t distract her from his earlier threat.

“Why are you threatening to remove me from office?” Kill my niece? And using my lover to spy on me?

“In case you hadn’t noticed, Doc.” Lister set his glasses back on his nose. “You are the only one who seems to have an bird’s eye view of the big picture. Right now, the wheels up here are spinning.” He tapped his silver temple. “But if you don’t take care of yourself, the motor will run out of oil, seize up and stop working altogether. I’m not planning on dying because your being self-centered.”

Her mouth fell open. She was being selfish? Who did he think she was working day and night to save? Her niece, yes, but them too. They were in this together.

“You start getting some sleep or I’ll remove you from duty.” He slid her tablet off her lap. “It’s as simple as that.”

“Fine.” She turned toward the window and yawned. No need to let the moosejawed bully know she was tired. He’s gloating alone would keep her awake. Slouching in her seat, she closed her eyes. They popped back open. Come on. She needed to clear her head, needed to keep her job.

Outside the window, the world was decorated in apocalypse chic. Smoke writhed over the smoldering neighborhoods. Carbonized studs and charred tile marked the remains of affluent homes. Ash flaked off skeletal branches of trees and shrubs. The air reeked of burnt hair and roasting meat. Singed  rats scavenged in the decay.

At the top of the embankment, ash-coated survivors shivered next to their meager pile of belongings. White eyes blinked in chalked faces. A Bible-black sky roiled behind them, while flashes of lightning illuminated the mountains behind the suburb of Cave Creek, still miles in the distance. Trails of red climbed the dark hills as fire serpents crawled across the ground, devouring everything in its path.

“Tell them we’re full up.” Lister barked as David shifted the vehicle to the side, parked it and killed the engine.

Mavis rolled her eyes. “The Sergeant-Major knows the drill. I’m sure he had it down the second time you said it.”

The twentieth was a bit overkill.

“He’s Army and enlisted. They need the repetition.” Lister groped along the floor before he found his half-empty water bottle. Deviltry glinted in his pale blue eyes. “Aren’t you supposed to be sleeping?”

David set his helmet on his head and wrapped his hand around the barrel of his M-4. “Which of the trucks still have room, Sir?”

Room. The trucks had so little room. Yet they couldn’t leave the sick and take only the healthy. Anthrax could take up to a month and a half to present symptoms. Everyone needed to climb on board and pray they weren’t already the walking dead. A chill slipped down her spine. Great, the fever was back and her throat hurt. If she hoped to get any rest, she needed another dose of aspirin. She reached for her purse by her feet.

The general tapped his keyboard. “Put them in seven and twenty-three.”

Her fingers wrapped around the medicine bottle and her nails bent under her grip. “Twenty-three?”

That truck housed her niece Sunnie. Glancing over her shoulder, she peered into the dust and smoke clogging the dirt road and rising from the wash. Where in the convoy was she? The trucks had leap-frogged each other so many times, it had been turned into a shell game. Sure, she’d started in the same vehicle as her niece but there’d been so many decisions that she’d been forced to move to the Humvee with General Lister. David had accompanied her, filling in when the original driver had nearly hit a tree before fever had rolled his eyes back in his head.

He’d be dead by morning. As would half the soldiers. Instead of protecting them, the anthrax vaccine had supercharged their immune system, drowning them with their own antibodies. She thumped her chest, temporarily dislodging the congestion. Hopefully, her older, slower-to-respond system would prevent her from meeting the same fate.

“Trucks twenty-three and seven have room.” Lister twisted the cap off his water bottle before tossing back his head and draining the contents.

She rubbed her burning eyes. At least, anthrax wasn’t contagious. But given the amount blowing around, it didn’t need to be.

The general eyed her. “You going to change my orders?”

Yes. She squeezed her eyes closed. Please, please, please, let her recover. She bartered her soul for her niece’s life. “No.”

“You know Johnson will have other patients to attend.”

“I know.” The words were razor blades in her throat. She’d been lucky to have the medic just on Sunnie for as long as she had. Everything her niece needed to beat the infection had already been dispensed. All that remained was one-on-one mortal combat.

Please, God, let her niece win.

“Maybe if we had more leaders like you, we wouldn’t be in this mess.” Lister turned back to his computer.

Don’t bet on it. She’d sacrifice them all to keep her niece alive. She’d promised her sister to look after Sunnie and she’d be damned if she broke that promise.

Speaking into his headset, David notified the numbered vehicles of the impending visitors then opened his door. Smoke tainted air drifted inside. “Try the walkie. She might be awake.”

Walkie. Where’d she put the darn thing? Forgetting the medicine, Mavis patted down her chest before thumping the plastic walkie. Sighing she plucked it off her belt and pressed the talk button. “Sunnie? Are you there?”

She released the button. Static crackled in the air for a moment.

“She’s asleep, ma’am.”

Mavis curled against the seat back as the medic’s deep voice drifted through the line. Sleep was good. She’d like to be sleeping right now. “How’s she doing?”

“No better or worse than fifteen minutes ago. Respiration is shallow and she’s still whistling Dixie, but her temperature is stable and she’s keeping down the Cipro.”

Good signs, all of them but it was a long way from healthy.

“Thank God.” Mavis closed her eyes. “Let me know when she wakes up.”

When, not if. She needed to keep a positive attitude. She yawned. Eighty winks sounded pretty good right about now.

“Before you drift off to theLandofNod, Doc.” Lister flicked the walkie which jostled her hand. “With all these delays, we’re going to need to revise our plans.”

Opening one eye, she glared at him. Sleep, don’t sleep. The man had more ups and downs than a yo-yo. “I could shoot you right now.”

He grinned, revealing white teeth, but fatigue hung heavy under his eyes. “That’s why I moved all the guns and knives out of your reach.”

She opened her other eye and shifted in the seat. Did they put the lumps in them on purpose? “I don’t need a gun or knife to kill.”

Her training had taught her that those things could easily be taken away and used against her. Instead, she’d learned to improvise. A pen made an effective weapon under some circumstances. So did a bed spring. Unfortunately, neither were particularly handy.

And the brass toting fat head keeping her awake probably had the same training.

“That’s why you’re in charge.”

No, she was in charge because she’d been second-in-command to the Surgeon General. Now she was all that remained of the US government besides the rapidly dwindling numbers of servicemen and women. And they were determined to maintain a chain of command with her being the ‘it’ girl.

Outside the Humvee, David guided the sleep-walking survivors to the right side of the vehicle while the convoy lumbered by. Pebbles pinged the metal body and dust coated the windows like brown powdered sugar. A truck filled the review mirror. She twisted on her seat. Was Sunnie in that truck?

“Now, about our evac plans. We need to revise our ETA.”

“No need.” Guess, she’d find out later. After hooking the walkie back on her belt loop, she fished in her purse for the bottle of aspirin. Since she was up for a while longer…. Gripping the bottle, her shaking fingers fumbled to line up the raised arrows. The plastic top slipped against her palm but didn’t open. Child-proof, her behind. Adult proof is more like it.

“Why’s that?”

“Because, I’ve already accounted for these delays.”

Lister held his hand out for the bottle.

Mavis glared at it then bit down on the top and pulled. Pain flared in her jaw before the cap popped off. The pills rattled against plastic. She spit the cap onto the seat near Lister’s open palm.

“You knew this was going to happen?”

“Basic rule of planning, consider how long something should take then multiply it by the human factor, also known as four, and then pray everything works out.” She dumped eight pills into her palm then popped one into her mouth. Bitterness and saliva flooded her mouth but soon the fire in her throat was doused. Blessed relief. Thank God the corpsmen had known that little trick. She scraped the residue off with her tongue. The rest she’d take with water.

Lister took the bottle from her hand and measured out his own dose then capped it. “The human factor is four?”

He tossed them in his mouth and chewed.

Yuck! She shivered. Either the guy needed more hair on his chest or he was trying to prove something. Like she had a penis. She take hers with water and be damn proud of it. She scanned the seat before leaning forward and checking the floor. Now to find her water bottle. There. By the door. Dumping the pills into a pile on her tongue, she retrieved her drink, opened it and took a gulp. Warm water washed down the tiny tablets.

“Most doom-and-gloom predictors prefer eight, but I like being optimistic.”

And practical.

The Palo Verde nuclear power plant lying eighty miles to the west was days away from melting down and spewing radioactive waste. With a storm heading for them, they would be directly in the fallout’s path. And that was only three of the thousand on the planet.

They had a thirty-percent chance of surviving the Anthrax.

None of them would escape cancer if they didn’t find a place to duck and cover within the timetable.

And God help them if they received a lethal dose.

There wasn’t enough cyanide to spike everyone’s punch.

“Doc?”

Mavis pushed aside the thoughts and blinked until the screen of her tablet came into focus. A map had replaced her earlier graph. Blips of light arched across the green matrix. “What’s this?”

“Wide view radar.” Lister held his screen next to hers. “It looks like we’re being invaded.”

She glanced at her water bottle before sniffing it. It smelled like water not vodka. “I really need some sleep. I thought you just said invaded.”

“I did.” He set a finger on her screen, shifted the view then tapped it. The image zoomed in on one glowing circle until silver wings appeared.

“That’s a plane.” Please, God, don’t let China have followed up their biological attack with a more conventional one. She tilted the tablet to get a side view of the plane’s logo. Doh! Embarrassment heated her cheeks. Maybe he hadn’t noticed.

“It’s a commercial airliner.” Chuckling, he tapped the screen again and it backed off. Hundreds of dots studded Japanese air space until they merged into one giant splotch as America’s west coast appeared.

The Japanese were invading the US? “What can they be thinking?”

“They’re directly in China and India’s fallout path. The Japs know better than anyone, except the Reds, the shit sandwich they’re about to be served.”

She scrubbed her hands down her face. Why hadn’t she considered this? She’d only gotten sick a couple of days ago. Good Lord, what’s going on in Europe?

Lister shoved his face in hers and breathed staled coffee on her. “Now’s the time to get that big brain of yours working, Doc.”

“I don’t–”

“You do. And you can.” Lister eased away. “What did you do before the war?”

The war. Her brain slipped gears before finding a groove and turning. Funny how she didn’t think of either the influenza pandemic or the germ attack byChinaas war. Yet it was.

Humanity teetered on the precipice of extinction.

The nuclear meltdown threatened to push them over the edge.

And she’d been on the front lines serving in the Weapons of Mass Destruction program, trying to prevent selfish nations and self-serving despots and tyrants from bringing humanity here in the first place.

She reached into her jacket pocket, searching for another cough drop. “I worked for the United Nations.”

“Exactly. You were a known spy. You know what these things can do, you understand their tactics. But more than that, you’ve been behind enemy lines, had guns shoved in your face, and been taken hostage by rogue governments.”

Shot, stabbed, nearly raped. All those things and more. Sweat misted her skin. But she hadn’t been alone. Others had her back.

“You, Doc, are the epitome of cool. You talk about bugging out, nuclear meltdown and extinction level events without so much as batting an eyelash.”

Her teeth clicked together. She wasn’t cool. She’d washed plenty of crabgrass out of her undies. Still…knowing her enemies meant she knew their weaknesses and how to thread the needle just right so humanity could come out the other side.

“What’s the answer? I know you have it.” Hope blazed in his eyes. “It’s people like you that’ll give us the edge.”

He needed to believe she had the answers just like his men needed to believe the officers knew what needed to be done. Just like the citizens needed to believe in the soldiers. So why did she picture herself as the nail keeping the kingdom from being lost?

On the other side of the window, David winked at her as he helped an elderly woman into the waiting arms of a soldier.

Well, hell, if everyone around her was delusional, didn’t that make crazy the new sane? She picked up her tablet and refocused. She could solve this problem. It was just one problem. The satellite zeroed in on the flock of silver birds. “Not all of them are heading this way. Some look like they’re heading toward Australia.”

He picked up a head set and adjusted the mouthpiece. “Give me a status on the Rising Sun Birds.”

White caught her eye. She shifted the screen and tightened the image on the slash under the plane’s wings. For a moment, blue waves filled her screen then the familiar bow-shape appeared. “There are ships under the planes.”

Lister eyed her screen. “That one’s a sail boat.”

The Japanese citizens hadn’t been thinking; they’d been following an primitive instinct to flee as if they’re lives depended on it. And they did. Unfortunately, they couldn’t outrun the radiation. In months, the American west coast would be awash in ghost ships ferrying corpses.

She set her hand over her mouth to stifle a scream. Every problem had several solutions. She just needed to find the solution. Find it. “Where are our boys?”

“Australia is mum on accepting the birds.”

Probably because there, too, everyone in charge had been wiped out by China’s anthrax stuffed animals. Which made landing a squadron of planes a rather tricky maneuver. But desperate people did suicidal things. She switched screens to her list of military assets. “Give me locations on the pacific fleet.”

The ships too far out of port to be safely recalled had been ordered to set sail for Antarctica. Those in Europe, Asia and the Middle East had evacuated as many personnel and their families as they could handle and headed for the same destination.

Lister changed screens. Blips popped up with unreadable names.

Mavis resisted the urged to slap herself for her shortsightedness. Zeroing in on the Naval ships nearOkinawa, she tapped them. “These guys need to save the insane from suicide and escort the other ocean going vessels to Australia. I want all airplanes routed to San Francisco, San Diego and Seattle.”

After relaying the order, he glanced at her. “I thought radiation will cross the equator and sterilize Africa, South America and Australia.”

“It will, but it will take a lot longer to reach and the exposure will be reasonably low.” At least that was the theory. How it played out in real life was anyone’s guess. She eyed the swirling weather fronts over the India Ocean. Nothing like playing chicken with Mother Nature.

But she would have to tackle the Southern hemisphere’s problem in the future.

For now, she had to help as many people into the future. “These submarines, why are they dry docked?”

Lister’s display showed the planes rerouting toward American shores. “Are you expecting another attack?”

“Nope, just thinking outside the box.” She double checked the class of subs. All were nuclear. Hot damn. She’d just won the lottery. “Do we have enough people to staff them?”

“Not fully, but operationally probably. Why?”

“Nuclear subs have years of power and can provide unlimited oxygen and fresh water to their inhabitants. And as a bonus, they could hunker down under the water safe from the radiation.”

“How long will our people need to stay under?”

God only knew, and he wasn’t talking. “Three months minimum.”

Probably longer. She still had to research how long it took for the atmospheric radiation to normalize after Chernobyl and Fukishima. All she knew was that it took less than seven days to sweep around the globe multiple times.

Multiply that by a thousand and their future was so bright it practically glowed.

She pushed the thought aside. Now was not the time for pessimism.

He adjusted his glasses. “I’ll have the supplies loaded.”

“Good. And have the sailors with families take them too.”

“Uh, Doc, I don’t think that’s such a good idea. There could be knife fights in  the sardine can.”

She pushed her bangs out of her eyes. “I know that under normal circumstances that is to be avoided at all cost. However, this is not normal. And Joe Squid might miss the reactor going from screwed to fucked because he’s worrying about his wife and kiddies somewhere on shore.”

His jaw thrust forward. “A phone call will set that straight.”

“Don’t count on phones or any technology working after the meltdown. Nothing but the green robots worked at Chernobyl. Nothing.” Men in uniform had saved the planet in the end. With only one tenth of one percent of the population predicted to survive, she couldn’t afford to throw anyone into the breach.

Doubt beetled his clipped eyebrows before he sighed. “Yes, ma’am.”

She smiled at his acquiescence. Sometimes it was good to be the nail holding the kingdom together. Hiding her gloating, she turned her attention back to her tablet. What other assets had she over looked?

The door opened ushering in a whiff of smoke. David set his weapon across his lap before closing it. He started the engine just as the passenger door opened next to Lister.

A Marine with Ladykiller stenciled on the side of his helmet leaned inside. “Everyone’s nipped and tucked, Sir. The menu is being prepared.”

Referring to the survivors as dishes to be served up was a little crass, but dark humor was a survival mechanism just like fight or flight. Mavis opened her email, waiting for the new data attachment. Maybe they’d get lucky and this bunch would have stayed home instead of visiting Burgers in a Basket, or living near one, or breathing anthrax laden air.

Lister glanced up from his laptop. “Excellent. I hope this one was a bumper crop.”

David started the engine.

The Marine stepped back then paused. “Sir, Meals-on-wheels are reporting hostiles East of our position. Or North, they’re a bit confused. Our chefs haven’t reported anything, but they’re–”

Bullets thunked against the side of the Humvee. One shattered the front passenger window with radiating fractures. LadyKiller’s forehead opened up with a splatter of an overripe melon.

“Get down!”

Clasping her hands over her head, Mavis dove for the floorboards. Heat stretched across her back before warm blobs rained down on her.

 

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Book Sale in time for Summer Vacation

I just love books and I love that i can buy books without taking up too much room (or hubby counting them) thanks to my fabulous ipad.

Of course an improvement on buying books is buying books when they’re on sale. Being I’m a writer and hang out with other writers who love books and sale priced books, a bunch of us got together and put our books on sale for the next three weeks. Just 99 cent.

Interested? Then check out this link:

But wait there’s more.

Many of us are chipping in for prizes and goodies that you can enter to win with a few clicks of your mouse.

http://www.facebook.com/IndieRomanceInkAuthors

So play along (because, really would you rather be working?) Oh, and this great website is offering goodies that go along with the sale. So check it out too! Psst, I’ve heard rumors of free books there. (Closing trenchcoat)

https://www.facebook.com/ebookswag 

Oh, and if you’re interested, these are the two books I put in the sale:

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Back in the Closet

I don’t know about you but there are just so many hours of the day and not enough ambition to get to the home repair projects that build up. Add in the fact that my husband and I work opposite shifts and I’d rather spend time with hubby than wielding a hammer (Thankfully I don’t have the kind of marriage where I want to wield a  hammer after spending time with hubby, although… oh wait, this is about the closet)

Several years ago (6 but who’s counting) we laid oak flooring in four bedrooms, associated closets, the hallway and the living room. We, um, declined doing the hall closet for obvious reasons–the bogeyman lives there. And so it sat with bald concrete floor and became a haven for the fur balls the dog and cats were trying to will into being for a period of time (6 years not that I’m counting).

Just as an aside, those are empty beer bottles that my husband uses to make his own beer, we’re not storing up for a apocalypse:-).  So on the weekend before I began my vacation, I decided time was up. The closet floor had to be laid which meant I had to knock out the built-ins. I love my built-ins–they store so much junk and the cats get to crawl in the back and hide from the dog. They’re just wonderful, so I decided if at all possible I would reuse them. Fortunately, I hammer like a girl so I didn’t predict too much damage.

So after dinner I sorted through the years of linens and other things (I found my crystal candlestick holder that had been lost for 4 years–Yay me!) and placed the keepers in totes and stacked them in my diningroom then piled the rest in the garage (which the gremlins are beginning to fill with stuff again). Then with the power invested in me by my magic blue pry bar and a trusty hammer, I set about dismantling the shelves. Three hours later–Voila!

The holes in the wall are from fixing the central vacuum system that had been mysterious clogged by something I told someone not to suck up. But that’s in the past and I’ve let it go.

Hubby came home to a rather packed dining room and an empty closet. The next morning, whilst he slept off his 12 hour shift I laid the floor, patched the drywall and restored the baseboards. Hubby prepainted the shelving and closet walls then together we reassembled everything with an admirable assist from Liquid Nail (Maybe if I’m really good this year, Santa will bring me an air compressor and a nail gun). Anyway, aside from a few touch ups, the closet was finished in only six years and three days.

Perhaps next year we can break that record.

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Redaction: Melt Down, chapter two (unedited)

I know that some of you have missed Trent:)

Chapter Two

“Why?” The man on his right wailed.

Trent Powers’s fingers tightened, crinkling the pages of the Bible. Five minutes. Couldn’t he have just five fucking minutes without some sniveling, sick bastard demanding his time? This was that damn Marine’s fault for mistaking him for a man of God just because he carried a Bible.

And what had it gotten him?

A ride with the unwashed masses of the world, dismissed by the powers that be, relegated to human cargo in a military convoy.

He should have corrected the ugly Lieutenant Sally Rogers when he first arrived at the camp. Should have but didn’t. That Marine had fucked up his plans by recognizing him, withholding food unless he kept up the pretense. Slutty Sally had encouraged it, seducing him with the promise of power. And now he was stuck.

Without power.

Surrounded by whiners who hadn’t the decency to die.

How could they not see he deserved better than this. Relaxing his hand, he dragged it down the page and watched the words exposed by his index finger. Would the idiot believe he was reading? Would he leaveTrentin peace?

It had worked before.

He swayed with the motion of the truck, bumping shoulders with his neighbors, driving a sharp elbow into soft flesh. The storm compressed the air, adding humidity to the body odor, sickness and the noxious gases expelled by the corpses stuffing the back of the truck. Canvas slapped his shoulders and neck in time with the wind and the hard wooden bench drove splinters into his ass.

He needed out of here, needed to be restored to his rightful place. But how? The inner circle seemed comprised of only two people–a United States Marine Corps General and the bitch who stood for the Surgeon General. Both of them had consigned him back here with the losers of the world. The words on the thin paper blurred. Not that it mattered–the Book was boring and contained horrible English. He’d stopped attempting to read it hours after he’d acquired it.

If it wasn’t for the money tucked in the pages, he’d have let it burn. He ran his index finger down the paper. A ridge of hardness bumped against the pad. Was it another fifty dollar bill? Or… His mouth watered. Or maybe another hundred? He’d already found three of them. He followed the soft edge to the middle of the page. Five would be nice. Ten hundreds would be better. He licked his lips. Maybe he could pretend to pray over the dead and take a quick peak.

He could use a little alone time.

“Reverend?” The man on his right barked before tugging onTrent’s sleeve.

His finger left the corner of the hidden money. Shit! The assholes wouldn’t leave him be. Flattening his palm against the open pages, he glanced into the narrow aisle running the length of the truck bed.

Hanging from the metal ribs, flashlights swung in an epileptic rhythm to the lumbering personnel carrier. Rain tapped tentatively on the canvas, raising liver spots on the drab green and brown covering. Near open back of the truck, a trio of men and two women wearing dark stained scrubs and crooked surgical masks hovered over a man. Blue stained his lips and his lungs rattled with each wheeze and gasp. One woman picked up his wrist, settled her finger against the pale skin inside.

Why did they bother? Nothing they did helped. He was a dead man; he just was too selfish to die.

Others, equally sick leaned against each other haphazardly and clung precariously to the benches. Near the cab, a handful of dead lay in fetal positions, stealing valuable space from the living.

The corpses should have been thrown out the back. They could be contagious.  They could get him sick.Trentpressed against the truck wall and adjusted his face mask. Maybe that why the powers that be had sent him here. He snapped the book closed, the small breeze stirred his hair and he smoothed it flat. If that was their plan, they would have to come up with a better one.

He refused to die.

“Hey!” The man on his right drilled his index finger intoTrent’s bicep. “I’m talking to you.”

He sighed. Whining was not talking.

The medical team glanced in his direction. One man took a step in his direction.

He raised a hand. Great, that’s all he needed–another sick, mewling bastard wanting to hear God’s word, wanting him to sit next to him and hold his hand until the asshole passed on. He had better things to do with his time. He needed to find a way inside the inner circle.

The male medic gave him a slight nod before turning back to his team.

One problem solved, now for the next.Trentturned to his bench mate.

Fleshy bags hung under the man’s bloodshot eyes. Skin dripped from his narrow cheekbones as if the fat had melted rapidly from under it. His long nose pointed to his thin lips and yellow, crooked teeth.

“Did you need something?” He’d be damned if he said ‘my son’ or other such bullshit. It should be enough that he stooped to talking to the scum of humanity. Soon, he’d be sitting all comfy in the air conditioned Humvee, stretching his legs out as much as he wanted. He just needed a moment to plan his rise.

His neighbor scratched the black stubble on his receding chin. Red rimmed his tan eyes and tears blotted the ash-coated mask on his face. “Why, Father?”

Father? What the hell! He looked young for thirty-six. Far better than this middle-aged asshole. His mouth opened just as his brain made the connection. Damn, he must be tired to not have caught on quicker. “I’m not Catholic.”

Therefore not a priest or father. Unless that bitch Sally had assigned him a denomination? He pinched the hasps on his mask until the metal dug into the bridge of his nose.

No Chin nodded and the waddles under his chin swung to and fro. “Why, Father? Why is God doing this?”

Trentsqueezed his eyes closed a minute. Telling the loser that he deserved it was out of the question. That slut Sally had taken him to task when he’d mentioned it yesterday. Not even fucking her twice had dispelled his anger. He smoothed his hair, skimmed the shell of ash. If the preacher he’d stolen the sermon from wasn’t already dead, he would kill him.

Some man of the cloth, he turned out to be. He’d made Trentbelieve that people wanted to hear they deserved this living Hell, that they had to atone for their sins, that only he, the gatekeeper to God, could provide salvation.

He’d been tricked.

The man on his left hacked into the crook of his arm before collapsing against the side wall. “It’s Judgement Day. That’s why. We’re dying because we sinned.”

Trent’s ears perked up and warmth flooded his limbs. The lying preacher that had run the homeless shelter had spoken of Judgement Day. Twisting at the waist, he inspected the man on his left. Perhaps, he had not selected his audience correctly.

“Tell me I’m wrong, Reverend.” A black tee-shirt strained against the beer gut hanging over his belt like an old woman’s tit. Sour sweat leaked from his overlarge pores and invadedTrent’s space cushion.

The only difference between this loser and the bums he’d had the misfortune to meet was that this man seemed to be better fed. But that didn’t rule out his usefulness.Trenthugged the Bible close. Maybe some good would come out of this after all. Brute force often came in handy and fools with low brows tended to have rudimentary intelligence–perfect for manipulation. “Why would I do that?”

The loser on his right stiffened. One claw-like hand wrapped aroundTrent’s bicep and jerked him around. “Are you saying my wife deserved to die?”

Trentturned on his seat and faced the aisle. All five members of the medical team faced him. Damn the asshole! Concern etched lines in four faces, but the fifth sharpened with interest. The hair on the back of his neck stood on end as the woman leaned closer.

He sifted through his memories. Shit! She’d been watching him. No doubt, the bitch in charge had ordered it. He sat up a little straighter. So Mavis Spanner had noticed his worth. Had he blown it when he’d tried the preacher’s message on the medics. They certainly hadn’t been receptive. Not that he’d expected any different. The fools treated woman as an equals, took orders from a woman.

He’d have to be careful. Clearing his throat, he dismissed the medics. If Mavis Spanner had recognized his worth, she might see him as a threat. He couldn’t have that. Not yet anyway. Not until he had an action plan.

“No.” Half-moon shapes burned into his skin from the grip but he didn’t pull away. He couldn’t have the spy moving closer, not when he’d just found a patsy in Beer Gut. Leaning the Bible against his belly, he raised his hands up like he’d seen the preacher do. “I’m saying we’ve lost our way and this is His method of getting our attention.”

“My wife didn’t deserve to die,” No Chin blubbered.

Of course, she did! He’d sat next to her and listened to her whine and sob before she had the decency to die. Feeling the spy’s eyes,Trentpatted the man’s hand. “No one is saying that.”

Beer Gut snorted and folded his flabby arms over his oversized belly. The black cotton fabric gave up the fight and rolled up, exposing swirls of black hair on gelatinous pale skin.

No Chin swiped at the tears leaking from his eyes. “She didn’t deserve it. She didn’t.”

Trentscratched at the scab at his temple. Why was the man blubbering on? The woman wasn’t much to look at alive. At least dead, she kept her mouth shut.

Finally, No Chin pushed off the bench. The wood creaked before he released it and shuffled toward his wife.

Beer Gut stretched his feet out.

No Chin stumbled over the work boots and fell onto the man across the aisle. The sick loser barely grunted from the impact.

“Sorry. So sorry.” No Chin smoothed the man’s clothes before straightening. He shambled the two feet to the corpse pile and dropped to his knees before scooping up his late wife’s hand and holding it close.

Beer Gut grunted. “What a loser. Why would anyone cry over a woman? Treacherous bitches the lot of them.”

Exactly.Trentsmoothed the cover of his Bible. “I’m Reverend–”

“Benjamin Trent. I know.”

Damn.Trentforced a smile and held out his hand. Hadn’t he told the bitch in charge his name was Trent Franklin? He’d have to find a way to correct her assumption when the cow sought him out. And she would. She had to. Since she’d sent someone to spy on him, she must know that he was too important to be kept down with these losers.

Beer Gut engulfed his hand in a fleshy prison before pumping his arm three times. “Name’s Dirk Benedict, Reverend. You really don’t think we deserve this shit?” He opened his arms encompassing the interior of the truck and nearly smacking his sleeping neighbor in the face. Balloons of flesh dripped from his arms.

From the corner of his eye, he checked the spy. She seemed focused on the blue lipped man. Good, he had time. But how should he proceed? The man seemed to be a kindred spirit, but then he seemed to be a reverend. Of course, Beer Gut wasn’t intelligent enough to fool a blind deaf/mute.

“Nice to meet you, Mr. Benedict.”Trentused the formality. The man probably hadn’t been respected his entire life. Then again, he wasn’t worthy of respect. ButTrentknew how to play the game. Once upon a time, he’d been the top insurance salesmen inArizonaand had dined with influential people.

He would have his status back soon. Maybe even more.

Dirk sat up straighter. The shifting of weight eased the strain of his shirt and it draped back over his fuzzy navel. “Call me, Dirk. Please.”

“And I’d appreciate it if you would call me Trent.” In fact, he’d have everyone calling him Trent to avoid the confusion. Reverend Trent had a nice ring to it. At least, until he could be crowned ruler.

“Trent.” Dirk’s thin lips arrowed into his jowls. “A good, strong man’s name.”

The smile set like concrete and his gut clenched. Shit. The asshole might be gay. He hadn’t counted on that. Slowly, he eased his hand free.

“Trentsounds like he should be the man in charge, not some fucking woman or the uptight military. Am I right? Or am I right?”

He eyed the spy. Still busy. Good. Now to have a little fun and test the worthiness of his new minion.

Dirk slapped his thunder-thighs. “I mean if this is Judgement Day, we should have a man of the cloth in charge, not some Eve stand-in fucking up our chances atParadise.”

Point in Ol’ Beer Gut’s favor. He recognized that women had gotten uppity.Trentswept his fingers along the satiny edges of the Bible. He had to play this smart. With the right wording, this conversation could have three endings. He could turn Dirk over to the bitch and her lackey and be rewarded. He could undermine the regime with Beer Gut’s help and take his rightful place in charge. And if the idiot messed up the coup, he’d have a fall guy.

No matter how he sliced it, he won.

“I am but a humble man of God…”

The words dangled in the air like bait. Would the fool really think he’d be able to manipulateTrent?

“Of course, that’s why you’re the perfect person to take charge.” Dirk wrapped an arm aroundTrent’s shoulders and squeezed.

His spine popped from the mangling but he didn’t move away. The conversation was just getting interesting. He blanked his expression–the perfect foundation for option one. “Take charge of what?”

“Our people.” After a brutal slap, Dirk released him. “You need to lead the new world order.”

Beautiful. He kept the smile from his lips. The fat man’s loose lips had just sealed his own fate. He had his leverage into the Humvee sanctum. But the other two options glittered from a distance. Catching scent of the alluring perfume of power,  his nose twitched. Why should he stop now? Didn’t he deserve to lead?

“You’re unhappy with the way things are running?” There. Things couldn’t get anymore innocuous than that.

Dirk nodded, the motion rippled up and down his overripe body. “Me and a few others. These bootstraps are nothing but gun toting thugs.”

Others? He stilled. Others had potential, especially if they’re healthy while most of the military was sick. He traced the cross embossed on the Bible. “Tell me more.”

After all, why should he share the Humvee?

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Temptation in Tartan by Sue Venice

Please welcome Sue Venice as she talks about her latest release, Temptation in Tartan.

Best-selling, award-winning author Sue Swift, a.k.a Suz deMello, has written over fifteen novels, plus several short stories and non-fiction articles. She writes in numerous genres including romance, mystery, paranormal, historical, contemporary comedy and erotica. She’s a freelance editor who’s worked for Total-E-Bound, Ai Press, Liquid Silver Books and Etopia Press. She also takes on private clients.

Her books have been favorably reviewed in PW, Kirkus and Booklist, attained the finals of the RITA and reached the top ten on a bestseller list.

A former trial attorney, she resides in northernCalifornia. Her passion is world travel, and she’s left theUSover a dozen times, including stints working overseas for many months. Right now, she’s working on her next manuscript and planning her next trip.

Her blog is at http://www.fearlessfastpacedfiction.com. Find her reading picks @ReadThis4fun on Twitter, and befriend her on Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/SueSwift).

Blurb:

She had to marry a monster…

Rumors had followed the chieftains of Clan Kilborn for centuries. Said to be descended from the Viking Berserkers, they were ferocious in battle, known for tearing off the heads of their enemies and drinking their blood.

But English noblewoman Lydia Swann Williston would marry Kieran, Laird Kilborn, to bring peace to the Kilborn lands after the horror of Culloden and the brutal pacification. A widow, she also brought needed wealth to Clan Kilborn. For her part, eighteen-year-oldLydiawanted children. With her husband killed at Culloden, she would make a new life in theHighlands.

The old chieftain of Clan Kilborn also died in battle, and she hoped that the new young Laird would lack his ancestors’ ferocity.

She was wrong.

Excerpt, Chapter One

“The Kilborns are great warriors, rumored to be descended from Viking berserkers.” Colonel Swann paced the drawing room, his boots soundless on the thick rugs.

Lydia’s belly clenched and she drew a frightened breath. “Berserkers! The savages who raided our shores, murdering monks and, er…attacking women?”

The colonel stared at her as though a potted plant had decided to speak. Not surprising, since Lydia had always been known in their family as the quiet one.

“The same,” he said. “And the Kilborn clansmen have intermarried for generations. Animals.” He tugged at his tight cravat. Out of uniform, dressed as a town gentleman, Lydia thought her cousin lost some of his edge. Scowling, he continued, “By this marriage we seek to dilute the Kilborn blood and weaken the line.”

“Weaken the line, sir?” Lydia’s mother, Henrietta, raised a brow. “Do you suggest that my daughter’s lineage is flawed? Ours is one of the noblest families in the kingdom.”

“True,” he said. “By adding Lady Lydia’s noble blood to the Kilborn line, we will civilize the wild Highlanders.”

Lydia tried to look civilized and noble, but couldn’t stop twisting the handkerchief in her lap. She rubbed its black edging, a reminder of her status as a widow. “You want me to marry an animal. A barely civilized wild man.”

“The Crown would take your selflessness as a particular favor,” her cousin said.

She lifted her brows. “Indeed.” As a general’s daughter, duty pulled at her blood.

“‘Tis a perfect solution. ‘Tis easier to pacify by marriage than by the sword. All parties will benefit.” His glance strayed to the bodice of Lydia’s gown. In half-mourning, she wore gray muslin trimmed with black piping. “You must desire children. The Highlander is doubtless, uh, lusty.”

She pursed her lips. She’d loved William, but hadn’t grasped why others made such a fuss about marital relations. But she did want children and had planned to have several. “You want me to marry a warrior who may have killed my husband at Culloden Moor,” she said. “I can’t do that.”

Colonel Swann remained silent but looked uneasy as Lydia’s mother crossed the room. “Your late husband,” Henrietta said and sat on an ottoman next to Lydia.

When her mother took Lydia’s hand, she couldn’t control the trembling. At eighteen, she knew she simply wasn’t brave.

Unlike her mother, who now peered into Lydia’s eyes. “Child, what else will you do? Of course, as a widow, you can refuse. But another marriage may make you happy.”

“Do I have to marry a wild Scotsman? Leave my country and everything I know?”

“Of course not. But you are already acquainted with all the other eligible males of our class, and chose William over all.”

“That’s so.” Lydia remembered her days of attending parties and balls in London a scant three years ago. She sighed.

“You’ll bring great wealth,” the colonel said. “And by your marriage, Kilborn will be spared the pacification efforts that other clans and chieftains suffer. You’ll be valued and honored.”

“I have my portion and William’s, but I am not particularly wealthy,” Lydia said.

“Not by London standards, but for an impoverished Highland chieftain, you are a rich prize.”

“Lovely.” Lydia stood and walked to the window, her voluminous skirts rustling.

Below in the garden, she could see her brother playing with one of his sons. She watched George pick up Andrew, toss the giggling child into the air and catch him before they collapsed in a laughing heap together on the sunlit lawn.

Her heart tripped. She might never see George and Andrew again. But she might become that happy parent, could have babies of her own to enjoy.

She turned to face her mother. “I’ll do it.”

 

Kieran, Laird Kilborn, strode along the upper wall-walk of his castle, his mood as dark as the midnight sky above. Below him, the sea crashed with the threat of a storm. His retainers scattered at the sight of their new laird’s frown, for Kieran was known to show his temper. His own father had borne a scar on his forehead from a tankard a young Kieran had thrown when the princeling had been but four.

Kieran pinched the bridge of his nose, staring out over Clan Kilborn’s crofts and lands, lit only by moonlight. His lands, now, following the deaths of his father and older brother at Culloden. An unexpected burden—his lands and his responsibility.

“Ye could look forever, but nothing will change.” Euan’s soft voice intruded upon Kieran’s dangerous mood. “That is, nothing will change unless ye marry the Sassenach lassie.”

Kieran turned, remembering to soften his frown. No one else would dare to disturb his thoughts, but Euan was different. The castle’s steward, he’d been old when Kier was born.

“Aye, the reprisals are cruel.” Kieran rubbed his hand over the sturdy stone battlement.

“They will only get worse. The Sassenachs are determined to break all of the Highlands and to destroy the clans who supported the bonny prince. ‘Tis a stroke of luck that the Swan wants you to wed the lassie.”

“Why, though? What’s the benefit to the Sassenach colonel?”

The smaller man shrugged. “We are a remote holding. ‘Tis easier to pacify us by marriage than by war, and far less costly.”

“I’ll never give up tartan or sword.” A thin, chilly breeze lifted Kieran’s dark hair off his shoulders. He drew his plaid, vividly patterned in red, yellow and two shades of blue, more tightly around him.

“Wed the Swan’s cousin and ye willnae have to.”

“I had not thought to wed yet, with everything so…unsettled.”

“Truly? There’s a certain lassie who’s set her cap for ye.”

“Grizel?”

“Er, I was thinking of Moira.”

“Oh, that one.” Kieran dismissed Moira with a wave of his hand. “She must know that Culloden changed everything, including her expectations.”

“Ye must secure the succession.” Euan’s dark, haunted eyes searched Kieran’s face. “I promised your father that I would see to it.”

“And would he have wanted me to marry outside our blood?” Kieran asked. His grand-uncle Euan knew more of the secrets of his family than did Kieran himself.

“Possibly not.” Euan looked troubled. “But marriage to the Sassenach lady will provide money, safety and heirs.”

“And what shall I do when the dark thirst takes me? Succor myself at my lady’s throat?”

“There are other ways.” Euan’s eyes were hooded and unreadable in the moonlight. “Other women—”

“No! ‘Tis like unfaithfulness. What of my honor?”

“There is no honor when the dark curse seizes us.”

“I must find a way, for the clan.”

“Then ye’ll marry the Sassenach wench?”

“‘Tisn’t so simple. The laird’s consort isnae merely a juicy quim or a fertile ewe. She must be more.”

Euan shrugged. “She’s a widow, managed her own household.”

“Hmm.” Kieran took a deep breath of the midnight air, scented with the tang of the nearby sea and the crofters’ hay. “Aye then, I’ll do it.”

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Blog Tour for The Syn-En Solution

Hi all,

I’ll be doing a blog tour for the Syn-En Solution. Here are the dates:

May 29 – Meet & Greet at VBT Cafe’ Blog
June 5 – Guest Blogging with Margaret West 
June 9 – Review & Interviewed at A Book Lover’s Library 
June 11 – Review & Guest Blogging at Words I Write Crazy 
June 12 – Interviewed at Reviews and Interviews
June 14 – Reviewed at Ereading on the Cheap 
June 20 – Interviewed at Unnecessary Musings 
June 22 – Reviewed at Books, Books, and More Books 
June 23 – Character Interview at Immortyl Revolution
June 25 – Reviewed & Interviewed at Book Reviews, Fiction Reflections, N’more 
July 6 – Interviewed at MK McClintock’s Blog 
July 7 – Interviewed by Louise James louisejames157
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Redaction: Melt Down Chapter 1 (unedited)

Chapter One

Day 7

After Anthrax Exposure

“Is that where we’re going, Missus S?”

Audra Silvester checked the rearview mirror. A pair of wide brown eyes in a chalky, half-covered face stared back at her. Oscar Renault. She’d had the pudgy, pimply-faced twelve-year-old in her class last year. Between his ADHD and his mother’s insistence that he was the perfect child, she’d decided to give up teaching. They had been the last straw in a baleful.

The notion seemed pathetically pitiful now. Thankfully, she hadn’t told anyone.

“You sick, too, Missus S?” Oscar slid off the seat behind her and scooted forward on his knees, seemingly unaware that he’d asked another question without having an answer for the first one. Snot left dark trails down the thighs of his worn, dirty jeans. His hand shook before he wrapped it around the pole on her right.

“No, Oscar. I’m fine.” Her words puffed against the bandanna covering the lower half of her face and whispered hot, moist breath back at her. Clammy sweat beaded her forehead at the odor of excrement. Hopefully it was from the slops bucket in the back and not…anything else. Unfortunately rolling down the window to blow away the stench wasn’t an option.

“You sure?” He wiped his nose on the back of his hand before scraping it off on his jeans.

“I’m sure.” She reiterated for the fourth time in the last five minutes. But God knew how long she’d be healthy. How long anyone of them would be.

She was going to die.

And one of these kids, probably Oscar who now hovered closer than her shadow, would infect her. The steering wheel jerked under her hands and she clamped down. Nails dug into her palms and her fingers cramped as she guided the big yellow bus half on the shoulder and half off of the interstate.

“You think you won’t not get sick again?” Oscar perched on the edge of his seat, scabby knees poked through the holes in his pants as he hung practically in the aisle.

Her skull throbbed from the double negative. Proper English didn’t really seem so important at the end of the world. Still… “I’m sure I will get sick this time. Especially since so many are sick again.”

But it hadn’t happened that way the first time. She’d stayed in the school, nursing the sick, cooking meals, forcing folks to eat, then recording the dead and handing them off to the military for mass burial. For six months, she never caught the Redaction–the influenza pandemic that had killed thirty-five percent of everyone. She’d never come down with a sniffle, sneeze or cough.

Surely, she wouldn’t be so lucky this wave.

“Why don’t you rest a bit? We’re still a long way from the soldiers.”

Oscar opened his mouth but no words came out.

Movement in the mirror caught her attention. Faye Eichmann prowled the aisle, heading straight for the front. White hibiscus petals painted the hot pink fabric of her designer dress. The long skirt fluttered around her toothpick legs. Pink and red plastic bangles clinked on her bony wrists while chunks of diamonds winked from her ears, throat and fingers.

The fortune on jewels was meant to insure she could buy food and shelter. Audra was pretty sure it would get her killed. The influenza wasn’t the only thing out there murdering innocents.

Oscar folded himself into the passenger seat and shrank away from the diamond encrusted harpy.

Too bad, she couldn’t do the same. Audra stared at the dozens of cars abandoned on the blacktop. Maybe she could pretend dodging the vehicles took up all her attention and ignore the woman.

In a puff of sour sweat and faded perfume, Faye stopped next to Audra. With her feet apart, she braced her hand on the metal rail. “Why couldn’t people have pulled off to the side of the road when they’d broken down?”

Because they were sick, dying or dead. Audra winced at the stench of smelly pits momentarily overrode the offal’s. Bad enough she had to wallow in her own stink, why did the woman feel the need to share hers when she asked rhetorical questions? “It certainly has slowed us down.”

Up ahead a black Ford pick-up truck tilted in the dip between the North and Southbound lanes of Interstate Ten. Its driver hung halfway out the open door. The stillness of his body didn’t relate his death as did his hands, swollen like black oven mitts, dangling an inch above the weeds. Of their own volition, her eyes checked the passenger side when she passed. Two dead children lay on their backs in a mat of weeds, their bodies bloated in the weak sun. Flies swarmed around them, laying larvae would devour the soft tissue with surgical precision.

“We’re up to seventeen.”

Wincing, Audra forced her eyes on the road and jerked on the wheel. Faye wasn’t callous; she just coped differently. Lots of folks didn’t want to get chummy with anyone, especially the sick, because of the risk of loss. It was understandable. It pissed her off.

“Nice driving.”

She shrugged off the sarcasm. Parents weren’t much different than their teenagers–rude, difficult and unwilling to learn. God, she hated being a teacher almost as much as she hated this new world. “I’ve learned a thing or three in the last nine hours.”

Nine hours. Almost four times the time it usually took to travel from Tucson to Phoenix. Her stomach cramped. And what did it gain her? This place looked no safer than where she’d come from, than where she’d passed through. Add in the intermittent belch of the air-raid sirens plus the lack of people and the creep factor spiked off the charts.

“You’re a cool one, Audrey.”

Taking a deep breath, she let the name slight pass and focused on what was important–surviving until she could dump her busload of sick onto the soldiers and get on with her life. She maneuvered into a lane completely free of vehicles. Maybe she’d be rid of them faster than she thought. Her foot pressed on the gas pedal and the bus picked up speed. “Seventeen sick isn’t that bad. We have nearly forty people on the bus.”

And if this flu worked like the last one, most of those seventeen would survive. She sucked on her bottom lip. But it didn’t seem to be playing by the same rules. They’d left quite a few corpses behind in the school cafeteria.

Faye leaned forward. Her floral bodice gaped open and a strand of pearls dribbled out. They swayed from side to side. “That’s the number of dead on the bus. Not that you care. You’re immune.”

Audra released her bottom lip. They all crowded around her like she was their personal lucky rabbit’s foot. Ask the rabbit how lucky he felt. “I care, and there’s no telling if I’m immune this go round.”

Faye snorted. Light and shadow played across her face, highlighting her crow’s feet and the frown lines around her mouth. “Doesn’t look like heading for Phoenix was such a good idea from where I stand.”

In the distance, pillars of black smoke dwarfed the skyscrapers wicking scarlet flames ever closer to the sky. The sunrise had punted a fuzzy, jaundiced ball over the jagged Superstition Mountains to the East. Ebony storm clouds spread like spilled ink on the western horizon and were cleaved apart by cracks of lightning.

Her nightmares were far more pleasant than this new world. They also contained fewer people. Soon she could walk away from their complaining. She just had to find the soldiers.

“That’s Phoenix. We’re going to Mesa.” Lifting her hand, she pointed out the right side of the bus.

The vehicle tilted as many passengers shuffled closer to the windows and pressed their noses against the glass. Seventeen may be dead but the rest were awake and… Aside from a few snuffles, she didn’t hear a cough in the bunch. How could that be?

Oscar ducked under Faye’s arm, crawled over the yellow line and sat on the top step. He swayed from side to side as he looked out the spotted panes of glass.

“At least the fires seem to be out.” Faye tucked her pearls back into her dress.

Not with that much smoke still billowing. Great belches of gray rose from the ground, obscuring any buildings except those along the freeway.

“There’s nothing on the freeway that would burn.” But the bridges and overpasses could collapse. Tucson had taught her that. Yawning, Audra shook her head to try to clear it. Tears raced to her eyes blurring her vision. She blinked them away. It had been a long night.

Oscar twisted at the waist to look at her. “What if all the soldiers are dead?”

“Then we salvage what we can and push on.” She slapped on the turn signal. Weaving through a handful of abandoned vehicles, she worked her way to the right hand lane. Someone had cleared enough space for her vehicle to merge onto the 202. She hoped it was the military and not some parasite laying a trap for travelers.

“To where?” Faye shot back.

Audra sighed. Like I have all the answers. Most of you didn’t listen to me when I was trying to teach your little ingrates English, yet now I’m supposed to know everything. “Not everyone in the military can be dead. Someone flew those Army choppers and Air Force planes. We saw them just this morning and they were heading north.”

A lucky guess on her part since they’d set out last night. Of course, not everyone had gone with them. Most had stayed behind at the school. They weren’t her problem now. Neither were the two buses that hadn’t made it passed Casa Grande. And, if they reached the soldiers, this lot wouldn’t be either.

She wouldn’t feel guilty about leaving them.

“North could be Flagstaff for all we know.”

A muffled sob rose from the back. Either someone new was sick or they’d discovered the person next to them was dead.

I can’t deal with this anymore. I can’t… She clamped down the thought. The opposite of can’t was death. She refused to die. “Then we will go to Flag and find them.”

“And how are we going to get there if we can’t go through Phoenix?”

“I’ll find a way.” Audra clamped her jaw closed. She’d go to Timbuktu to get rid of the woman. The engine grumbled as she climbed the onramp onto the Santan freeway. Merging, she blinked. The freeway was deserted. Four empty lanes for as far as her eye could see. True, blowing smoke reduced that to a mile or so, but she’d take it.

“Miz S?”

“What is it, Oscar?”

“I’m glad we came with you.” His heel tapped out a beat on the floorboards. “You’re smarter than anyone I ever knowed. You can get us through this.”

Well, crap. Why did he have to go say something like that? Now, she couldn’t throw him off the bus, let alone correct his improper English. Most of the half-covered faces in the rearview mirror nodded. “Thank you, Oscar. I hope you’re right.”

For all our sakes.

“I am, Miz S.” He leaned against the dash and drummed on his leg. “I am.”

She cleared her throat and blinked rapidly to clear away the tears. Stupid smoke must be getting in her eyes.

“Breaker. Breaker. Two. Eight. This is seven-niner. Come back.”

Audra rolled her eyes at the gibberish crackling through the child’s walkie-talkie strapped to the dashboard in an old blue jean’s pocket. Mrs. Rodriquez had certainly thrown herself into bus driving with enthusiasm. Her passengers quieted and expectation hummed in the air. After seven hours of near silence, they were being talked to by someone outside their bus, too bad it wasn’t a radio broadcast with an update.

“Can I answer, Miz S?” Oscar jumped to his feet. Steadying himself, he clutched the bar near her head and snagging a lock of her hair in the process.

Heat burned along her scalp at the pull. Leaning toward his hand, she eased the burn a little bit. “Sure.”

Faye snorted and plopped down on the seat behind Audra. “An adult should answer it. That toy is the only thing keeping us together.”

She was the only thing keeping them together. For some strange reason, people listened to her, followed her. Good Lord, when would it end?

Duct tape protested when Oscar pulled the walkie free. A corner of the empty pocket folded over. He squeezed the black button on the side and held the toy against his mouth. “This is bus twenty-eight, er, I mean two-eight coming back to you seven-niner.”

“Good morning two-eight.” Mrs. Rodriquez chirped.

Audra twisted her hands on the wheel. How could someone be so happy so early in the morning and without coffee, especially when they’d been up all night driving?

“We’re running low on gasoline.”

Audra bit her lip. The happy pronouncement was battery acid in a wound. No gas. No go. No soldiers. No safety. No rest. She eyed her own gas gauge. The red needle flirted with the bar just a hair above empty. The tank had been full since the schools were prepping to return to action before the Redaction returned. She eyed the road sign, mentally tallied the distance between them and the targeted campus. “How low are you? We’ve got twelve miles to go.”

“I’m near to coasting.” The chirp dulled in her voice. “Who knew a two and a half hour trip would take us nearly nine, and we have no idea how long the last twelve miles will take.”

Three other voices echoed Mrs. Rodriquez’s concerns. That made every driver in the convoy. Audra tapped her brakes as the smoke thickened.

“We can’t stop here!” Lurching to her feet, Faye swayed while standing on the yellow safety line. “I hear rats.”

Gray clouds pressed against the windshield and the sound of squeaks penetrated the bus. Rats. Audra’s toes curled in her cowboy boots. The flames herded them. She leaned forward until the steering wheel cut into her belly.

“Do you see the fire?”

Bending, Faye braced one hand on the dash. Her head turned from side to side. “It’s everywhere.”

Which meant they couldn’t stop or even slow down.

Oscar clicked the on/off button, punctuating the rat serenade with static. “What do you want me to say, Miz S?”

“Ask if anyone sees flames.” Her eyes strained to detect the red tongue of fire high above the sloping concrete walls. Rats streamed down the pink surface but didn’t swarm in a panic. Still, if they pulled off too soon, they’d be overrun and eaten by the fleeing vermin. Cold snaked down her spine. She’d seen it before. Please God, don’t let me ever see it again.

“Miz S wants to know if anyone can see where the fire is.”

“In the smoke breaks, I can see some intermittent meatball in marinara sauce.” Mrs. Rodriquez answered.

Oscar giggled.

Audra swallowed the bile in her throat. Whoever referred to the rat roadkill as food should be shot. Spaghetti and meatballs had been her favorite dish until they’d coined the reference. She doubted she’d want to eat it ever again. And her problem still wasn’t solved. They needed to know where the fire was.

“I think I see flames in my rearview mirror.” Jacqueline Silvester’s voice drifted through the walkie. “Would someone please verify?”

Audra inhaled a slow breath. Despite everything they’d been through her mother still wouldn’t come out and state something least she offend a stranger. Not that she minced words with her daughter. Oh, no, Audra was issued commands every time they met or spoke. She should have stopped listening to her mother years ago. Heck, even ten hours ago would have been smart. Then she wouldn’t be in charge of this group. She tightened her grip on the steering wheel and eased into the center lane. But as soon as she found the soldiers all that would be in the past.

“Good call, Jackie O.” Mrs. Rodriquez confirmed. “We’ve passed the fires.”

Audra smiled at the nickname. No one would have dared abbreviate Jacqueline Silvester’s name back in Washington D.C. or compared her to a Democratic first lady. The Silvester lineage dated to the founding fathers and so did the family fortunes. They bled Republican. Welcome to the new world, Mother.

“I think we should go another mile up to be safe, then exit.” Mrs. Rodriquez sang. “What say you, Madam Fearless Leader?”

Oscar grinned showing teeth he’d yet to grow into. “That’s you.”

“I know.” Audra winked at him while scanning the horizon. The smoke did seem thinner.

“Exit?” Faye flapped her scrawny arms. “Why exit? We have all the fuel we need in the last bus. We can stop right here on the freeway. No need to get off.”

Audra ignored her. Advice was so easy to give when no one asked for it. Especially when everyone already knew it.

“What should I tell her?”

She slapped on the turn signal and made her way to the right hand lane. “Tell her we’re going to fill up.”

The buses followed her lead and swerved.

She shifted in her seat. Maybe she could empty her bladder and stretch a bit. Hopefully it wouldn’t take too long to refill from the barrels on her mother’s bus–the one carrying the last of their food and many of their belongings.

Plus a few corpses.

The corpses. She sucked on her bottom lip. What should she do with them? Leaving them on the side of the road seemed so callous, especially when there were rats prowling for a meal. But carrying them further was out of the question–they could be contagious. The scent of fecal matter drifted by. Her gut threatened to exit her mouth. And there was the matter of the slops pot. The five-gallon bucket they used as a potty needed to be emptied.

“Miz R, we’re pulling over.” Oscar shouted into the walkie.

The rest of her passengers scuttled to their seats. Three of them raised their hands.

She shook her head. Once a teacher… “Yes, Haley?”

An eight-year-old in a red jumper stood up, crossed legs and wedged a hand against her private parts. “Can we get out, Miss Silvester? I have to pee.”

“Yes.” Ignoring the shoulder, she guided the bus up the ramp. They needed facilities, hopefully the kind with running water. “Grab your buddy and stay close to the parent assigned to watch you.” If they were still alive. “I don’t want anyone getting lost, you hear?”

Groans interspersed the ‘yes, Miz S’.

“Pit stop sounds delightful, Miz Slopspot.” Mrs. Rodriquez  twittered through the walkie. “Mr. Know-It-All says we could try for the Burgers in a Basket. He says they were opened for a few days and will have laid in a supply of cooking oil we can use to conserve our biodiesel supply.”

Cooking oil for biodiesel? That didn’t sound right. Audra braked at the top of the ramp. But then what did she know? She taught English not science. “Okay, I’ll keep an eye out.”

Cars jammed the intersection. Flies swarmed some–a sign that their occupants slowly rotted inside. The stench of death clung to the pervading smoke drifts. She glanced right then left. Two gas stations across the freeway.  Would one of them have batteries to power their radio? Surely, there had to be news somewhere.

“I see one, Miz S.” Isaac jumped on the floor. “I see one.”

She followed the direction of his pointing. On the south side, along with a string of stores, sat a gas station and a Burgers in the Basket. Wood boarded up the broken windows of the gas station and only the eight remained of the eight-ninety-five price tag for a gallon of regular gas on the milky sign. Gang tags stained the stucco walls in bloody hues. At the restaurant, faded posters proclaimed the arrival of toys for the new movie Hatshepsut.

Grand reopening signs hung from the eaves of the grocery store and fluttered in the breeze. Empty carts scattered across the rutted parking lot. Here and there, tall weeds sprouted above closely cropped greenery. A narrow strip of asphalt had been cleared through the metal bottleneck, funneling them to the restaurant. The skin on her neck prickled. Please don’t let this be a trap. Please. Please.

Cranking the wheel hard, she eased onto the gas pedal. The front fender scraped black paint off the side of a BMW. Metal screeched as she pushed the car back against the median. Maybe she hadn’t quite gotten the hang of driving a bus. Hopefully, no one was around to hear.

As soon as the bus straightened out, she pulled the steering wheel in the other direction. An ache spread from her clenched jaw and tightened her scalp. Who was the idiot that designed such a tight turn? She jerked backward when the bus jumped the curb. Her hand shot out and her fingers curled into Oscar’s jacket, keeping him on his feet.

“Whoa!” His dirty nails dug into her arm.

“Why don’t you put the walkie back and sit down?” She rolled through the empty gas station bays.

With a shrug, he tucked it back into the jean pocket on the dash then smoothed the fabric flat and fiddled with the tape. By the time he’d finished, the bus had coasted into the fast food joint’s parking lot.

Kids. She shook her head and shifted the bus into park. A check in the rearview mirror showed that Mr. Dunn hadn’t stirred in his seat.

Faye grabbed Oscar by the scruff of his neck and shoved him toward his seat before catching Audra’s eye. “He passed around four this morning.”

Fear banded her lungs. He’d been recovering yesterday. Well, the day before yesterday. Still, she couldn’t remember the Redaction killing so fast or folks seeming to recover then getting worse. She shook off the thoughts. She’d think about it later, when they were safe with the soldiers. “Do you want to check for strangers?”

Faye glanced outside before shaking her head. “I’ll watch over the children.”

Great. Audra ran her fingers through the keys in the ignition. She had to go outside. With shaking fingers, she undid her seatbelt. The metal buckle clunked against the floor but she barely heard it over the pounding in her ears. Slowly, she turned in the seat. Her legs tingled from the change in position. “Get me the flashlight.”

“Why? It’s not dark outside.”

Really? Was the woman so dense or was she desperate to get behind the wheel?  God, what if she took off, leaving Audra behind? She flexed her fingers. Faye wouldn’t take off without the supplies or fuel. “For protection from unfriendly strangers.”

Children lined up behind Faye–each doing a unique potty dance.

Faye spun around but didn’t make an effort to move. “Can someone pass the flashlight forward?”

Like a green baton, they passed it overhead until it reached the front of the bus.

Faye was smirking when she turned again. “Here you go.”

Audra’s palm closed around the warm metal. “Thanks. If it’s safe, I’ll come back for the children and you can empty the slops pot.”

Faye gasped.

If Audra had to risk her life, she shouldn’t have to lug the pooh as well. Squaring her shoulders, she tugged on the metal handle and the doors folded back. Warm air rushed in. Under the ever present smoke, she detected the faint odor of calamari thrown on a hot charcoal grill. Her stomach clenched.

Somewhere close by, people had burned.

Please don’t let them have been alive at the time. She finished the prayer as her boots scraped asphalt. The last buses in the caravan pulled up until they bracketed the fast food restaurant. A man in a gas mask and camouflage exited the bus behind her. He swung his shotgun left then right before rushing toward her.

Exiting bus seven-niner, a man in a dirty business suit waved his pistol in the air then jogged to the area behind the bus. The principal sure did like acting like a desperado, then again, after twenty-nine years, maybe he hoped he could shoot some of the more difficult parents as payback. She hoped it didn’t get him killed. A moment later, a trim woman in torn jeans and an oversized AC/DC tee-shirt jumped off the bus. She swung her Louisville slugger for a moment before setting it on her shoulder.

Gas mask puffed like Darth Vader as he slid to a stop next to her. His snakehead tat throbbed over his carotid artery. “We got twenty-two dead.”

“Seventeen for us.” Audra set her hand against her face mask as the wind tried to sneak under the fabric. Her ears pricked and her heart tripped over a beat. Did she hear voices?

Bat-girl sprinted from Principal Desperado’s side to join them. A sheriff’s deputy in faded khakis replaced her and tamed the pistol waving.

“We have ten dead on our bus. Principal Dunn thinks we can put them in the gas station.” She jerked her chin at the boarded up building. Her blue surgical mask slipped and her almond-shaped brown eyes widened before she shoved it back in place.

A hot wind bent the weeds and shook the busses. In the distance, something exploded.

Audra flinched and faced the noise. Black smoke belched from a neighborhood across a vacant lot. Evil red fireflies danced in the cloud. The sparks landed on the shingle roofs.

Frown lines appeared in Batgirl’s forehead. “I wonder what caused the explosion.”

“People.” Gas mask wheezed. “If we stay here too long, they’ll find us. We need to complete our business before they attack.”

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