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Authors: C. Dulaney

Tags: #Coming of Age, #Horror, #Action & Adventure, #Fiction

Roads Less Traveled (5 page)

BOOK: Roads Less Traveled
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“Let’s just look around the barn for now, and then we’ll head back to the house. Go on, round the barn,” I whispered to Gus as I pointed around the corner. Gus was a beagle and a pretty decent rabbit hunter. This was one of the tricks I had taught him in the field, but usually I would tell him to go ‘round the bush, or ‘round the tree. Regardless, he got my point. His tail began that psychotic wag and he grinned at me, then took off around the barn with his nose to the ground. I followed, moving slowly with my gun raised. I had just rounded the corner and saw the rear was clear, when something hit the back of my legs with such force it almost knocked me to my knees. I screamed, jumped, and swung the barrel around, ready to put a bullet between the eyes of my attacker.

“Ah Jesus,” I moaned. Gus looked up at me panting, tail still beating the air and his tongue hanging out the side of his mouth. I blew out my breath, closed my eyes, and tilted my head back in relief. That’s when the panic that had been looming around me all day decided to rear its ugly head. Moaning began, all around me. My eyes snapped open and I saw the sky was suddenly dark.
It’s still daylight
, I thought.
Got twenty minutes ‘til sundown.
Sweat beaded my forehead, my arms began to shake, and I couldn’t breathe. I looked for Gus and found him at my feet. He was snarling.

“No, no this isn’t real,” I told myself. I lowered my rifle and pointed the barrel at Gus as I starting to back-peddle. The moaning was getting louder, beating and grinding in my head like glass. I dropped to my knees, suffocating, and the gun slipped from my sweaty palms. I think Gus realized what was happening to me because at that moment he started barking. Not that yippy noise most house-dogs make, but the long baying of a hound. I jumped; it felt like I was being shaken from a dream, and looked up at Gus. He took this as his cue to run over and lick my face. The shaking subsided, as did the zombie moans (which weren’t real to begin with). I took a deep breath and patted my friend on the head.

“Don’t let me do that again, or you’ll be on your own. Got it?” I told him, my voice trembling more than I would have liked. He answered me by licking his chops and sitting down.

I shook my head and stood slowly, deciding to abandon the barn. Gus was right, there was nothing back there and nothing as far as I could see in the pasture. Shaken up but once again in control, we walked back to the house just as the sun began to set behind the hills.

 

* * *

 

The light on the answering machine was blinking when I walked back into the kitchen. I hit the button, suddenly frozen in place wondering who had called. Ben. I rubbed my forehead and went about making a pot of coffee. His message wasn’t frantic, just letting me know they were at the farm and to call him as soon as I got his message. I figured I had time to at least put on a pot of Joe before he started freaking out. It wouldn’t be the first time I would figure something wrong.

“Kasey Stratford, where the hell have you been?! I called and you didn’t answer, what’s wrong?!” He was obviously hysterical.

“Take it easy, nothing’s wrong. I’m fine. I just did some patrolling outside. Calm down okay? I’m fine. And don’t ever last-name me again, you’re not my mother.” I took a cup from the cupboard and walked over to the coffee pot.

“Well how was I supposed to know that?! With everything that’s going on, you knew damn well I would have been worried sick if you hadn’t answered the phone.”

“Are you mad?” I smiled and tried very hard not to laugh.

He sighed and was quiet a moment. “No, just exhausted,” he finally answered. “How are things there? Still no sign of them?”

“Basically,” I said, a wave of nausea hitting me as I recalled my neighbor’s demise. I stared at the coffee as it dribbled into the pot.

“Basically what? Basically good, or are you just avoiding the question?”

“Well thank you, Captain Obvious, I wasn’t aware of that. And yes, things are as fine as can be expected here. And yes, I’ve seen one. But it’s been taken care of.”

His voice softened, knowing my sarcasm was an old mechanism I always used just before “going into the woods.”

“I’m sorry, just take it easy okay? Put on some coffee, listen to some tunes, and relax. This would be a very bad time for you to shut down and fold.”

I chuckled as I poured myself a cup, thinking about how well he knew me even though we had never even seen each other face to face. Believe it or not, people can grow quite close only conversing online and by phone. I had known him for roughly six years now, first meeting him in a horror movie chat room.

“I’m okay. Or I will be as soon as I know what’s going on there,” I said.

He sighed again and I could hear him walking, moving away from the voices in the background.

“That’s a loaded statement. I hope your coffee is ready, and it’s a full pot.” He was hesitating and there was grief in his voice. I once again sat down in my worn kitchen chair, coffee cup full and Gus at my feet.

“Lay it on me.” I wanted to hear his story, if the McKinley’s were okay, and I knew if I could keep him talking, I wouldn’t have to tell him about the panic attack I’d suffered earlier.

Chapter Four

 

 

Later that day: Ben’s side

 

“Mike, I swear to God, if the next words outta your mouth are ‘I have to piss,’ or ‘Are we there yet,’ I’m gonna stop at the next zombie and put your ass out,” Jake said, his teeth clenched as he stared out the windshield. Zack snorted beside him and glanced back at Mike, who had just swallowed his next question. Ben smiled; he liked Mike, even though he was a little too high-strung for his own good. Ben reached over the sleeping Kyra and patted Mike’s shoulder, making a face in the direction of the driver’s seat. Mike covered his mouth, not wanting Jake to hear anything from him for fear he might make good on his threat.

Ben relaxed back against the seat and watched the trees streak by. The only stop they had made was at a small gun shop on the farthest edge of town. Now they were on the last leg of a long and painfully slow trip, and Ben was refreshed to smell anything other than smoke and death. The driving had been tedious at first, Jake having to weave in and out of traffic, dodging not only cars but masses of zombies, but they were now clocking a fairly decent speed. This would put them at the farm early and about that there were no complaints.

Jake slowed and turned left off the main road. Ben noticed the mailbox flag was up. Kyra woke, being jostled around by the bumpy gravel driveway.

“Where are we?” she asked.

“Almost there,” Ben whispered, patting her shoulder with one hand while moving his other behind her shoulders to pull her off of Mike. Jake slowed as they neared the house. The sun was almost down and the house was dark.

“Shit,” Jake mumbled and eased to a stop just in front of the garage. He put the Jeep in park and shut it down. Everyone remained silent as they studied the house, looking for any sign of movement, listening for any sign of life. Zack was the first to speak.

“We going in?”

“Yeah,” Jake answered. He pulled a shotgun from between the seats and worked the pump. He looked back at Ben and nodded.

“Are you comin?” he asked. Ben simply nodded and opened his door. Kyra grabbed his hand and squeezed.

“Be careful,” she said before releasing his fingers.

“I will. You two stay here. Mike, if there’s trouble, use that gun,” he said as he pointed to the pistol in Mike’s lap. Mike nodded, then shared a look with Kyra as Ben shut the door. He checked his revolver, made sure it was loaded, then joined Zack and Jake at the porch steps.

“Should we knock first?” Ben asked. He had used guns before at the shooting range, but the pistol suddenly felt very alien in his hand. Jake was staring at the front door like he was expecting Ed McMahon.

“Yeah I guess we should. If Granddad is home, he wouldn’t appreciate us just bargin’ in.” With the shotgun hanging at his side, he proceeded slowly up the steps. Zack winced as the old wood creaked and whined under their weight. He had a rifle propped over his shoulder, the butt of the stock in his palm. Jake opened the screen door, glanced at Ben one more time, and then rapped his knuckles against the wood. They listened intently for several minutes, but heard nothing. Ben walked over and tried to see through the mudroom window, but it was too dark inside. Jake knocked again, this time harder and longer. Still nothing. He pursed his lips and turned to Zack and Ben.

“We need a flashlight,” he said.

“Yeah hang on,” Ben said and skidded down the steps, then jogged over to the Jeep. He opened the back door and rummaged through his backpack. Jake and Zack remained on the porch, mumbling to each other and trying to see through the windows.

“What’s going on?” Kyra whispered as she and Mike leaned in closer.

“Mr. McKinley isn’t answering the door so we’re going in and make sure everything is okay.” He found the long Mag-light and was turning to leave.

“Is he dead?” Mike asked.

“I don’t know. They may not be at home is all. That’s what we’re going in to find out,” Ben answered and slammed the door. He hurried back onto the porch and handed the light to Jake.

 

* * *

 

Moonlight spilled through the kitchen window, washing over the table and revealing a dinner only half-eaten. Jake stuffed the house key in his back pocket and touched the meatloaf as he walked by, noticing it was cold. Everything else looked as it should, no signs of a struggle. Zack and Ben followed closely as they left the kitchen and entered the living room. Jake maneuvered around the furniture; having grown up here he didn’t need light to find his way. He motioned for Ben and Zack to stay put, while he went on to check the bathroom and guest bedroom. Still no sign of anything or anyone.

“This doesn’t make any sense,” he whispered as he strode back to the others. Ben jerked his head in the direction of the stairs. Jake set his jaw, nodded, and moved on.

The beam from the flashlight jumped and danced against the wall as they climbed the steps. There was still no sound, no scratching, nothing to indicate anyone was home. Jake reached the top first, looked left, then right, and motioned for the other two to check the bedroom on the left. He would take the right; his grandparents’ bedroom.

Zack approached the door and pressed his ear against it. Ben stood maybe a step behind him, shoulders bunched and gripping the pistol tightly with both hands. Zack took several deep breaths and nodded once to Ben before turning the doorknob. He regretted throwing the door open the second he realized he didn’t have the flashlight.

“Goddamn it!” he hissed as he hit the light switch and swung the barrel into the doorway. Ben immediately followed him in, gun raised and head snapping back and forth.

“Shh,” Ben said, halting just inside the door behind Zack. They listened closely, even sniffed at the air, but saw and smelled nothing. Ben walked to the bed and flipped the comforter back, then knelt on one knee and checked underneath; nothing. They were alone. He heard Zack sigh heavily, then felt his hand on his shoulder.

“C’mon, let’s find Jake,” he said as he pushed Ben into the hall.

 

* * *

 

Ben stopped so suddenly when he reached the open bedroom door that Zack almost knocked him over. He peeked over Ben’s shoulder, then stepped back into the hall. He rested his rifle against the banister and folded his arms across his chest, keeping his back to the scene inside.

The lamp on the nightstand cast an amber glow through the room. Jake stood at the foot of the bed with the barrel of his shotgun pointed at the floor. Ben made a move towards him but Jake just held up his palm, his eyes never leaving the bed. They both watched silently as Mrs. McKinley sat on the edge and gently stroked her dead husband’s hand. She appeared to be totally oblivious to their presence. They could both see Bill had died of something other than a bite; there were no traumatic injuries, nothing to indicate a zombie attack. There was an empty glass on the nightstand and a prescription bottle next to it. Ben glanced at Jake again, then back to Mrs. McKinley. He holstered his gun and eased himself over to her side.

“Mrs. McKinley?” he asked as he laid a hand on her shoulder. She flinched at his touch and slowly turned her head. Ben could see tears streaking her face, but otherwise she was unharmed. He kneeled next to her and glanced at Bill before locking his eyes on her.

“It’s okay now. I’m here to help you. Jake is here too,” he motioned towards Jake. “What happened here Mrs. McKinley?”

She didn’t answer him, just continued to stare with a blank expression on her face and tears falling from her eyes. Ben placed his other hand over hers, holding it and Mr. McKinley’s. He could feel Bill’s fingers were cold, very cold, and estimated he had been dead for some time. He leaned back and caught Jake’s eye. He frowned and jerked his head, motioning Jake to move his ass and comfort his grandmother. Instead Jake went straight for the pill bottle. He peered at it closely and read the label over and over, trying to make sense of what his eyes were telling him. He set in down, then turned and walked out of the room.

“Go back downstairs and turn on all the lights. Then go outside and bring Mike and Kyra in. The house is safe,” he said without a hint of emotion in his voice. Zack simply nodded, picked up his gun, and left. Jake leaned against the banister, his fingers gripping the old wood so tightly his knuckles turned white. He stood that way for a long time; head lowered with his eyes squeezed shut. He didn’t hear Ben when he finally stepped out of the room and walked over beside him.

BOOK: Roads Less Traveled
8.06Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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