I stopped walking and stared at him, speechless.
“Mitch, I don’t understand a fucking thing you just said. You want to try it again—in English?”
He paused, and then laughed. “Sorry, man. Sometimes, I forget that some people don’t know as much about guns as I do. My wife used to tell me the same thing when I started going on about them. I’ll give you a crash course. The safety is off. Set the rifle against your shoulder, sight through the scope, line up the crosshairs, and squeeze the trigger. Try aiming at something right now.”
While I sighted on a glass bottle lying in the gutter, he handed the second pistol to Tasha. She needed less instruction than me, and my ears and cheeks burned with embarrassment.
“What do I get?” Malik asked.
Mitch looked at me and I shrugged. He stroked his salt and pepper beard, considering the request.
“Can you throw a Softball?”
“Yeah,” Malik said. “Better than anybody on my street.”
“Can you throw it really far?”
“Damn straight I can.”
“Here.” Mitch handed him a grenade. “Now listen to me. This is really, really dangerous. You pull this little pin here and throw it as far and as fast as you can. Then get behind something. Can you do that?”
Malik puffed his chest up proudly. “Find me some dead people and I’ll show you.”
“Hopefully,” I said, “you won’t get that chance. If we can get to the marina without running into any more of those things, that would certainly be okay with me.”
We started walking again, going slowly, all four of us watching for more of the undead. Behind us we heard the crackling roar of flames as the fires continued spreading, punctuated with the occasional gunshot or scream. The smoke wasn’t as bad, though—maybe because the buildings in Fells Point were mostly two-stories high and the smoke could rise into the sky easier, instead of getting trapped in the city’s concrete canyons.
“You must have owned a gun store, right?” I asked Mitch.
“Nope.”
“A gun salesman, then?”
He shook his head. “No, but you’re close. I was a salesman, but not guns. I’m just a firearms enthusiast. I always liked hunting and target shooting.”
“So what did you sell?”
Mitch grinned. “Bibles.”
“Get the fuck out of here. You look like a Hell’s Angel.”
“I’m serious, Lamar. I was a Bible salesman; sold to Christian bookstores and churches and private academies, mostly. I covered my tattoos up with sleeves when I needed to, and took out my earrings. Bibles were my business. Guns are just my hobby.”
I frowned. I don’t know what it’s like for other gay people, but in my experience, the Christians I’d known had been less than understanding when it came to my sexuality. Of all the people to fall in with as we escaped the city, it looked like we’d joined forces with a possible fundamentalist who would judge me based on some old book supposedly written by the world’s most omnipotent bigot.
Mitch must have been able to read the expression on my face. “Don’t worry. I’m not a believer in the product. I’m just a spokesman.”
I snorted. “You don’t believe in God?”
He waved the pistol around. “Do you, after all this shit?”
“No. But you sell Bibles.”
“Sold,” he corrected. “Somehow, I don’t think I’ll have much business anymore. Yeah, I sold them. I sold lots of things-televisions, cars, computers, insurance, and vacuum cleaners. There was just more money in Bibles.”
Laughing, we continued on our way.
Behind us, the fires spread, driving the dead forward.
Chapter Four
After fifteen tense minutes of sneaking through alleys and side streets, staying out of sight of the zombies when we could, we finally emerged at the waterfront. We smelled seawater. To our right was an old factory that had been converted into a nightclub. It took up the whole block. Past the nightclub was the old Sylvan Learning Center building and several luxury hotels that towered into the sky. In the distance was the Inner Harbor itself, along with the stadium and downtown Baltimore’s skyline. Buildings were on fire there, too. On our left was the private yacht club. We could see all kinds of little boats and pleasure crafts tied up at the docks. Leftover yuppie toys. There was no movement inside the club. We heard a bell toll once; probably mounted to someone’s mast. It was the loneliest sound in the world. A twelve-foot high wire mesh fence surrounded the yacht club. The gates were chained and padlocked. Curled lengths of razor wire stretched across the top of the fence. Security cameras were stationed every ten feet, along with floodlights. The cameras and lights were dead, of course, just like everything else.
“What is it with fucking padlocks tonight?” I fingered the lock and then turned back to Mitch. “Don’t suppose you got a pair of bolt cutters in your backpack?”
“No. Wish I did. I take it this isn’t the first time you’ve been stymied by a lock tonight?”
I shook my head. Above us, a pigeon took flight with an angry squawk. I envied the bird. Found myself wishing we all had wings so we could fly above the city. Mitch stared up at the bird, too, and then turned to the fence.
“We can’t climb it either,” he said. “The kids would cut the shit out of themselves on that razor wire.”
“I can climb,” Malik said. “I ain’t afraid of no wire.”
“I am,” Mitch replied. “And you should be, too. It’ll cut the hell out of you. Slice your arms and legs to ribbons.”
Malik appeared doubtful.
I stared at the boats—so close and yet so far away. “Couldn’t we just shoot the lock off?”
“Not one that big. That’s high-end, American-made steel. A smaller lock, yeah, it would work. A round or two from the forty-five and we’d have no problem. But we don’t have the firepower to even dent that fucking thing. We could use a grenade, but that would attract too much attention.” He kicked the fence in frustration. “The owners really made sure no one could get in.”
“Doesn’t surprise me,” I said. “There were a lot of homeless people in this area. Used to beg off the tourists and college kids, and the folks over in the office blocks. No doubt they’d have slept on the boats if they could have gotten in.”
Instead of responding to me, Mitch raised his pistol and fired a shot past us. The empty shell clattered onto the ground. Tasha, Malik and I all jumped in surprise. I turned around. A zombie lay in the street, blood spreading in a pool from its head. It had been creeping up on us in silence.
“We’d better figure something else out,” Mitch said. “And quickly. That shot is sure to bring more of them.”
I pointed at a small, cinder block building next to the nightclub. A sign outside indicated that it was a machine shop. “Maybe we could try in there. Find something to cut this chain with?”
“Good idea.”
“Come on, guys.” I motioned for Tasha and Malik to follow us and they did.
We ran across the street to the machine shop. The only entrance from our side of the building was through a large, graffiti-covered garage door. I figured it would be locked, but when Mitch bent over and tugged at the handle, the door rose a few inches. Maybe the owners had not had time to lock it, or maybe someone else had already broken in. Unoiled pulleys screeched. A horrible slaughterhouse stench drifted out.
Tasha grabbed my arm. “That smells like…”
Grunting, Mitch yanked on the door. It rose higher.
“Mitch,” I whispered. “Wait.”
My warning was too late. Mitch let go of the handle and the door shot upward, disappearing into the ceiling. The interior was pitch-black, but something moved in the shadows. We saw feet. Then legs. Zombies lurched out of the darkness—two; then six; then a dozen. The machine shop was full of them. Guess they’d been trapped inside for a while, unable to open the door. Just standing there rotting, waiting for someone to free them. A few of them had exploded abdomens. Others suffered from swollen, leaking limbs. Mitch jumped backward and the dead spilled out into the street. There were more inside, stumbling toward the light.