Read Rise & Walk (Book 2): Pathogen Online

Authors: Gregory Solis

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Rise & Walk (Book 2): Pathogen (19 page)

BOOK: Rise & Walk (Book 2): Pathogen
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Thirty

 

While the Blackhawk’s rotors cycled down, Alexandra looked up at the massive mansion in the distance.  She was familiar with some of the details of the property that she had forwarded to Denkinger on Richardson’s orders.  Those files included tactical information of interest to the security team, but omitted blueprints of the living areas.  After reviewing the files she learned that the property contained an extensive bomb shelter built in the nineteen-sixties, fuel storage for both the helicopter and other vehicles, and a cache of medical supplies.  Located in the garage were accommodations for twelve men, as well as two Chevy Suburban SUVs, and a bullet resistant Lincoln Town car.  She wouldn’t have been surprised if the old man had a misappropriated Abrams Tank stored in an underground bunker.  If it were so, that information would have passed through her hands on its way to Denkinger; as it would be tactically important.  What was surprising was the outer appearance of the mansion.   At first Alexandra felt an odd sense of déjà vu when she saw the grey structure.  It seemed familiar though she had never been here before.  Upon leaving the helicopter she caught a greater sense of the building’s scale.  It was three stories, with the bottom story much taller then the other two; about fifty percent greater.  The front portico stood underneath a pediment supported by four Doric columns.  The mansion seemed like it belonged somewhere in the antebellum glory of Peachtree Street in Atlanta, not in Northern California’s Gold Country. 

Almost fifty yards down the stone driveway was the guest house where Lance lived.  Apparently, Richardson didn’t think his son fit to live in the main house.  Some of the men made their way towards Lance’s residence.  Alexandra turned to be sure the pilot was able to access the fuel pump in the hatch at the base of the helipad.  With refueling underway, she turned to catch up with Richardson.

 

Veronica exited the front door with her shotgun in her left hand held by the shoulder strap.  She presented herself to the approaching party as openly as possible.  Two military men began to sprint to her, a third stayed with the suited man.  An attractive female assistant approached behind a group of other soldiers.  Veronica noticed how some of the men stayed in a formation while two stayed back with the helicopter.  A soldier took Veronica’s weapon, the other kept her covered.  She placed her hands on her head and waited for the older man to reach her; hoping that her story was going to work.

“Who are you?” The grey-haired man asked.

“You must be Lance’s father.” She smiled.  He nodded impatiently.  She answered, “My name is Veronica Emmons; I’m a friend of Wanda’s.” She nodded, “Wanda Clairmont.”

Gavin turned and said something to his assistant that Veronica didn’t hear.  He turned back again, “Where’s my son?” he questioned.

“I was hoping you knew sir.  Neither he nor Wanda made it back here.”

“Made it back from where?” He demanded.  The assistant said something in Gavin’s ear.

“We were all at the lake when those people got sick.  He told us to meet here then went off with some of his friends.  They were armed.”  Veronica tried to look uncertain, “I don’t know what they were gonna do with the guns… Wanda was in her own car but we lost her in the confusion.”  Veronica put her hands down and assumed a depressed slouch.  She turned towards the house ignoring one soldier’s priming of his weapon.  She sat on the steps of the porch and continued.

“It was a nightmare; people went crazy and started fighting for no reason…”  She looked up at the party.  “A car accident started a fire at the gate, so me and this other girl from the lake went the back way; up and over the mountain and then to here.”  Veronica saw most of their skepticism dissolve, and why shouldn’t it?  Her story was mostly true.

“I saw Lance with two of his friends in his silver truck after the gate was on fire, so he would have had to come out over the mountain like we did… but no one has yet.”  Veronica looked at Gavin.  He turned to this assistant.

“Finish the refuel.  I want to be airborne in fifteen minutes.”

“That’s in progress sir.” Alexandra answered touching her earpiece communicator.  The woman looked at Veronica as if sizing her up.  Veronica thought that the woman was out of place.  Something about being an assistant to this man didn’t seem right. Gavin turned his attention back to Veronica.

“So, Ms. Emmons, who else was with you?”

“I’ll get to that sir,” said Veronica standing, “but first, would you happen to have a medic with you?”  Relaxed sub-machine guns tensed up once again and took aim at her.  She turned to the closest guard.

“It’s not for me,” she admonished with a dismissive expression.

“Who then?” Gavin’s voice was deepening with impatience.

“An old woman with a heart condition, her name is Margaret McCormack.  She’s upstairs, in the master bedroom.  She needs vasodilators.  She used to take Nitroglycerine but the doc changed her prescription and I don’t know what it is.”

“McCormack… “Gavin mumbled as if reminding himself of the name, “from town?”  Veronica nodded.  Gavin spoke to Alexandra, “I know the woman.  Her son was our first casualty during Desert Storm; a Captain I believe.”  He looked to the largest soldier and motioned towards the house.  The soldier spoke, to another.

“Lewis, check her out.”  The soldier snapped to action but was stopped by Gavin’s voice.

“Afford her every courtesy; her son was a hero.” Gavin said.

The soldier nodded with respect as if feeling the weight of Gavin’s words and then continued into the house.

“Now, Ms. Emmons, again, who was with you?”

 

Veronica never had any interest in Drama while in school, nor did she have any real experience with lying.  She had a great relationship with her father and it wasn’t until his death that she had ever had cause to obfuscate the truth, and that was only to his doctors.  Now, with guns drawn on her, she was giving the performance of a lifetime.  Most of her story was true, but she omitted what Gavin Richardson wanted to know most; the fate of his son.  She made no mention about hiding in the shack with him, about his cowardice, shooting her, or Nikki shooting him, and his eventual consumption by flesh eating monsters.  Her adrenalin was up allowing her to ignore the pain in her side.  She was handing out whoppers but coming up with a story to explain what experienced soldiers would easily recognize as a gunshot grazing was beyond her abilities as a thespian. So she made sure to stand up straight and pretend that she wasn’t in pain. She told them about her friend Nikki and that they had met Margaret while looking for Nikki’s parents.  She omitted Nikki’s last name in her story and her physical description.  Veronica finished by explaining that Nikki had returned to town to search for her parents but that she had stayed to care for the old woman.  Gavin appeared satisfied with her story.  The medic returned and gave a report.

“She’s sleeping.  She’s not infected she’s just old; respiration’s fine but her heartbeat is weak.  If she’s on vasodilators, then she’s going to need them again; when, I can’t say.”  The medic shook his head.

“Do you have anything to help her?” asked the largest soldier.

“I hung a bag to stabilize her fluids, but that’s all. I have Antibiotics, Analgesics, Hemostatics, but nothing for Angina, or Acute Coronary Syndrome; which I suspect she may be facing.”

Alexandra touched her earpiece and then spoke to Gavin.

“Bird’s ready sir.”  Gavin looked at Veronica and spoke.

“Ms. Emmons, I’m going to go find my son.  You’re welcome to stay and watch over Mrs. McCormack.  When we return we’ll see what we can do.”  Gavin motioned to the largest soldier to hand her back the shotgun.  The soldier hesitated.

“Denkinger!” Gavin ordered.  The soldier squinted and opened the shotgun.  He removed the two shells and handed both the shotgun and ammunition to Veronica separately.  She accepted the weapon sheepishly and did not load it.

“She’s your patient now.” Gavin said and turned towards the helicopter.  His menagerie followed.  Veronica tugged the medic by the shoulder.

“When she had her attack, she seemed to be in a lot of pain, do you have anything for that?”  He considered her request and frowned.

“No, I’m packed for combat not geriatrics.  The pain meds I have, Morphine, Ketamine, they’re much too strong for her, even in a slight dosage.”

“What about Vicodin?  There’s a few in the house.  Could that help?”

“You could try a half a tablet, if she can swallow it.  It should relax her helping to prevent an attack, and certainly help with pain.”  He said reluctantly, “Look, I fix wounds.  I don’t have any experience with treating old age.”  He nodded his head once and turned to join the others.  Veronica watched them enter the helicopter and fly off.  She wondered if they would find Lance’s body, and what Richardson would do when he returned.  Watching the helicopter shrink in the sky, she reloaded her shotgun.

 

*****

 

The hospital atrium led into the main lobby.  The wide open area was now only illuminated from the glass ceiling that encompassed half its dimensions. The floors were soaked with run off from the upper floor’s sprinklers, splashing every footstep.  The five fanned out like birds flying in formation with Mason at the center..  He looked about warily; eyes searching the shadows while listening intently.  Splash splash; sounded in the distance as something approached.  From another direction and above them, wet sounds, deeper in tone, like someone slapping their hands on the surface of a pool.  Mason nudged Tony and pointed up a wide staircase set into the wall.  The stairs led to a second floor that surrounded the main entranceway.  A large man, almost shapeless with obesity, shambled on the balcony, grunting with each step.  He was moving in their direction, towards the top of the wide stairs.  Tony moved at Mason’s urging and stood at the base of the stairs.  The man was naked though his overhanging belly hid his genitals.  Fleshy bare feet slapped on tiled floor as if he were wearing diving flippers.  Tony felt a little weak lifting the baseball bat. 
This guy’s big; maybe we should just start shooting and hope we can take whatever gets in our way
.  As the form approached the top stair, he made no attempt to step down.  What must have been three hundred and fifty pounds or more of dead flesh, tumbled over like a meat-domino and surfed the surface of twelve-feet of wooden steps, face first.  Each step tenderized the front of the beast a little more than the last, breaking open skin, flattening cartilage, and releasing puss.  Tony leapt back two paces to avoid its soggy landing.  Despite its trauma, the thing still moaned on the floor and writhed to try and stand.  Tony lifted the bat and swung downwards, impacting on the base of the skull; in this case, the soft fatty area that resembled three plump sausages stacked together. A sickening
ting
sound resonated as the aluminum struck, jolting Tony’s arms.  Its head reeled from the blow and bounced off the hard tile.  A murky puddle of infected fluid trickled and swirled under its motionless head.  Tony shook his left arm that now stung from the vibration of the impact.  He looked back to the group and saw the terror in Billy and Gabe’s eyes; Nikki averted hers, embarrassed for the naked man.  She knew him from town, everybody did and she was guilty of cracking a fat-joke here and there at poor Clancy Burrows’ expense.  Suddenly, those jokes didn’t seem so funny anymore.

From a dark hallway behind a massive circular information counter, emerged the source of the other splashing sound; the distorted shape of a woman.  The ghoul approached lazily until she saw the group, then raised her head up stiffly and picked up her pace.  With arms outstretched she moved nearer; a dry sucking sound as her lungs filled with a high pitched, almost urgent yearning.  Mason stepped forward to meet her advance, twirling his climbing axes in each hand he moved in a half circle around her.  She diverted from her course and lunged.  He deflected the dead woman’s arms to the side with the left-handed axe, spinning her off balance.  He brought the right-hand axe over and downward; piercing the skull.  The body jerked hard, its right shoulder began twitching faster than Mason thought possible in a death-twitch spasm.  His axe, made for climbing, held firm to the woman’s skull, as it was designed to.  Mason kicked at the flailing woman and twisted his axe blade as if it were a bottle-opener to work it free.  The body fell and convulsed on the floor leaving Mason standing with a disgusted expression.  For a moment he thought of discarding the axes, and just returning to the use of his sword.  But he remembered that any new weapon takes some time to get used to; with that thought, he kicked at the ghoul’s head as if it were a soccer ball.  After the impact of a motorcycle boot and the crunching sound of small vertebrae, the body twitched no longer.

Mason froze and listened for more creatures but heard only the sound of water dripping.  The smell of old smoke and stale mold filled the air.  He crouched and scanned the area and saw nothing.  He relaxed, straightened up, spun his hand axes once more, and decided to keep using them for the time being.  He turned to look at Nikki and lifted a hand as if to say, “After you.”

Nikki recognized Jack’s motions with the climbing axes as the same ones he used in the sporting goods store.  It was odd to see a maneuver practiced, and then later on, put to deadly use.  She was going to have to think about practicing some moves of her own; deflecting then striking.  Her mental analysis was almost detached from the horrors of what Mason was doing, until he kicked the corpse.  Nikki knew it had to be done, but something about the way Mason did it unsettled her.  Kicking someone in the head seemed so monstrous, but then again these were monsters.  Mason seemed a little too comfortable with physical violence.  Almost as if he was listening to her thoughts, Mason turned and motioned for her to show them to the pharmacy bringing a chill to her spine.  She almost smiled when Tony moved in front of her and proceeded towards the information desk.

BOOK: Rise & Walk (Book 2): Pathogen
10.68Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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