The two black SUVs drove behind them at a distance of about fifty feet. They drove side by side, taking up both lanes. Mandy couldn’t see the drivers or the passengers. The windshields were slightly tinted, showing nothing but darkness and the glint of the sun.
What kind of group, after an EMP, was organized enough to have two matching SUVs, both with tinted windows?
It didn’t make sense. Especially considering that the rest of the world was a wasteland, full of abandoned cars and trash blowing in the wind.
“Who do you think they are?” said Mandy, glancing over at Max. “Someone like the militia back near Philly?”
He was holding his rifle. There was a look of intensity on his face, and in his eyes, that didn’t match how calm his voice sounded.
“Maybe,” said Max. “But it doesn’t matter much.”
They must have been driving about ninety miles per hour, but Mandy couldn’t tell because the speedometer was broken.
The pickup truck was old, and it was going as fast as Mandy could push it.
The sun was high in the sky and bright. There were a few clouds here and there, but not many. Mostly just little wisps of white against an immense backdrop of blue.
The truck wasn’t insulated well against sound. The sound of the tires on the road had become a roar. The shocks were old. They felt every little bump, which sent the pickup ratting all over.
“They could catch up if they wanted to,” said Mandy. “This rusty bucket of bolts isn’t going to outrun them.”
“They’re staying back,” said Max. “But they’re still following us.”
“Tell me something I don’t know,” said Mandy.
“How long does this road go for?”
“What?”
“Does it end? Does it go for miles?”
“I don’t know,” said Mandy, her voice getting frantic. “I can’t even remember what road we’re on. Check the maps.”
Mandy was normally so good with maps, but she was panicked, and it seemed that she couldn’t call the memories back like she usually could.
She could hear Max unfolding the map, the sound of the crinkling paper somehow coming through despite the roar of the pickup.
The road was curving around the right. A wide, long curve.
The road took them right into the path of the sun. There weren’t any clouds in front of it.
Mandy squinted against the light, reaching up and flipping the sun visor down.
“Watch out!”
Mandy saw it too late. It was something big, right in the middle of the road that she was barreling down. It was about the size of a large television, one of those older boxy ones. If they hit it, that’d be it. It’d ruin the truck.
Mandy pulled hard on the wheel.
Too hard.
The pickup went careening off to the right. They were headed right off the road, where there now was a slight dip before it met the ground.
She tried to correct it. But it was too late.
She saw the front of the pickup dipping down as it went off the road.
That was the last thing she clearly remembered.
After that, it became a blur. Her head flopped like a doll’s, her neck swinging.
Somehow, the pickup flipped over. Mandy’s world spun wildly as the pickup tipped.
The side of the truck slammed into the ground.
The terrible loudness of the event suddenly faded into nothing but silence. There was some sound off somewhere, but it seemed too distant too matter.
Mandy was still alive. That was the first thing she noticed.
The next thing was that she was facing the wrong way. The truck was on its side, and so was she. The world was all cock-eyed.
She was above Max, hanging in place by her seatbelt.
Max was in his seat, below her, close to the ground.
He wasn’t moving.
“Max!”
There was a long pause.
Then Max moved, lifting his head. There was blood on it, in his hair.
“You OK?” said Mandy.
“Yeah,” said Max. “They’re coming. We’ve got to get out of here. Undo your seatbelt.”
“But I’ll fall,” said Mandy.
“Does your door work?”
Somehow, Mandy’s left arm had been injured. She felt the pain now as she moved it. But she got a grip on the door handle and pulled it.
Nothing.
She pushed it, despite the pain in her arm, pushing and pulling at the same time.
Still nothing.
“It’s stuck,” she said, her voice full of anxiety. She felt frantic. Her heart was pounding.
“It’s OK,” said Max, his voice calm. “Roll down the window. Quick.”
Mandy rolled it down as quickly as she could.
“Try your seatbelt.”
“I’ll fall onto you.”
“It’s OK,” said Max. “Do it.”
Mandy found the seatbelt button and pressed down hard.
Nothing.
“It’s stuck.”
Mandy felt the tears forming in her eyes. She didn’t want them to be there. She didn’t want to cry. She wanted to stand tall and go out fighting. But she couldn’t help how she was reacting.
“We don’t have much time,” said Max. She could tell he was keeping his voice calm just for her. “Can you reach your knife? You’re going to need to cut yourself free. You’re going to fall on me. But you can climb up through the window. We need to hurry.”
Mandy glanced back through the tilted rear window. The black SUVs were there, but so far the doors were closed and no one seemed to have gotten out.
“I’m going to cut my belt first,” said Max. “That way there’s no risk of you falling on the blade.”
Mandy had her hand on the handle of her Mora knife. She removed it from its sheath and held it tightly, waiting.
“OK,” said Max. “Got it. My knife’s away. Cut it.”
Mandy sliced through the belt. It was more difficult than she’d thought it’d be. A serrated knife probably would have worked better.
She tried to hold onto the steering wheel, but she fell, right onto Max.
“OK,” said Max, his eyes on the black SUVs. “I don’t know how much time we have. This part is tricky. I’d get out before you, but we’re not going to be able to manage that. You’ve got to go first. I’m going to cover you.”
“How?”
“I’m going to break the window and start shooting.”
Mandy started climbing. She used the dashboard, the stick, and the steering wheel to hold on to, eventually grabbing hold of the open window.
As she climbed, Max hammered away at the back window with something. Mandy heard a couple cracks as the glass started to break.
“You got it?” said Mandy, holding herself up there, but not yet going through the window.
“Almost,” said Max.
“Why aren’t they getting out yet?” said Mandy.
“No idea.”
There wasn’t time to worry about that. The more mistakes the enemy made, whoever they were, the better it was for Mandy and Max. Their chances of survival had already increased drastically because of that error. But they still weren’t high.
It was strange, almost insane, that Mandy was thinking of her odds of survival. Almost on a daily basis, too.
Another noise, and Max said, “I’ve got it. I’ll open fire on the count of three.”
Max counted it off. “Three…two…one…”
Max opened fire.
“Go!” he shouted. “Get out there and get to cover!”
Mandy’s heart was pounding, her vision a tunnel. She climbed up through the pickup window, handgun in hand, rifle on her back. She didn’t know what was coming. She might take a bullet in the next seconds. This might be her last moment alive.
But she had to go.
There was no other option.
23