A bullet hit where it shouldn’t have — one of the back tires. There was a pop as the thick rubber was reduced to uselessness. As the Recon ground to a halt, I reached for my Beretta.
“Hold on!” Makara yelled.
Makara spun the wheel, facing the vehicle sideways to our attackers. More bullets riddled the frame on Anna’s and Makara’s side. The other side would offer us cover.
“Get out the other side,” Makara said.
We rushed to get out as more bullets ripped into the Recon’s side. Beside me, Lisa knelt on the ground and snapped a scope onto her sniper rifle. Once done, she put it to her eye, scanning the rim of the canyon on the Recon’s safe side.
“This side looks clear,” she said.
Anna peered through the Recon’s windows to the other side. “It looks as if some of them are coming this way.”
“Who the hell are these people?” Makara asked.
“One of the Desert Tribes,” Anna said. “Not sure which.”
“Really?” Makara asked. “I wouldn’t have guessed that. I thought you were supposed to be our guide.”
“Usually Char keeps this area clear,” Anna said. “Normally, the Tribes wouldn’t attack outright like this.”
“Stop fighting,” Samuel said. “It isn’t helping.”
At the top of the canyon, a man showed himself from behind a rock, aiming his rifle down. My ears nearly split when Lisa’s sniper rifle fired. The man’s head burst like a melon and his body plummeted into the canyon.
Makara looked at the mangled tire doubtfully. “The jack and the spare are both in the cargo bay. If we go in through the back we’ll be out in the open.
“So how do we get that tire out?” I asked. “It won’t fit through the cab.”
Everyone thought for a moment. Thinking, however, was a difficult thing to do under enemy fire.
“We need to get that tire and not get killed in the process,” Samuel said.
“Maybe Lisa can snipe them all out,” I said.
“Yeah?” Lisa said. “By the time I set up a position they will have sniped me out.”
“Not if you’re inside the Recon, with the window cracked just enough to aim your gun out. The glass is bulletproof. As long as you can look out the glass with your scope, you should be safe and able to fire on them. That should give everyone else enough cover to get the tire.”
Lisa thought a moment. “That…might actually work.”
“Get to it,” Samuel said. “And be careful.”
Lisa jumped into the Recon and took up position behind the second window. A few bullets were fired from the rim of the canyon. A moment later, the loud crack of the sniper rifled echoed off the rock walls. Lisa fired again, again, again…
The bullets from above stopped raining down.
“They’re hiding,” Lisa shouted. “Now’s your chance!”
Makara and I ran around the side of the vehicle, only to have a bullet ricochet off the ground at our feet. We hopped into the cargo bay before any more could fire at us. The tire was mounted on the wall on the right side. We grabbed the tire and jack. We quickly jumped back out with the tire, dropping it next to the group.
“Let Makara work,” Samuel said. “You stand guard.”
From time to time, Lisa’s sniper rifle fired, sending a deafening blast throughout the canyon. Anna stood nearby with a pistol out, looking unsure. She was much more at home with the blade still sheathed on her back.
The Recon was already lifted from the ground. Makara had the mangled tire off in less than a minute. She was fast.
“Brings back old times in L.A.,” Samuel said.
“They’re running away,” Lisa said, jumping out of the Recon, sniper rifle pointed skyward. “I think they’ve given up.”
Makara was lowering the jack. The new tire was on, and we were ready to resume our journey.
“All done,” she said. “Get back in so we can…”
An otherworldly bellow permeated the canyon, causing me to cover my ears.
“What the hell was that?” Lisa asked.
“In the Recon, now!” Samuel yelled.
We rushed to get inside. Makara turned the key in the ignition. Behind, I could hear the ground shake. Something really big was charging for us.
“What is it?” I asked.
“Just go, go!” Samuel said.
As the Recon tore through the dirt, Makara clicked on the LCD screen. It revealed a giant creature, at least fifteen feet tall. It had a stooping frame and ripped muscles. Its sickly pink skin gave away where it had came from — the xenovirus — but it was like nothing I had ever seen. It was bipedal and had angry narrow slits for eyes. It reminded me of Kari, the giant creature we had fought at Bunker 114. Only this one was bigger. And angrier.
It charged forward, nearing the vehicle.
“Alex, do something!” Makara yelled.
“Do something? Against that thing?”
“The turret!”
The Recon surged ahead as the creature’s extended claws scratched the back of the vehicle. We gained a bit of distance, but the respite wasn’t to last. The creature closed the gap, nearing the Recon once more.
“Alex, man the turret!” Samuel yelled. “Go, now!”
I got up and ran to the back, climbing the short ladder to the turret. I opened the hatch and stepped through, trying not to let the bumps throw me off balance.
The giant machine gun was waiting for me.
It was pointing ahead, so I wheeled it around. The monster was closer than ever, just a few strides away. Its grotesque face was open, revealing rows of razor-sharp yellow teeth. Its all-white eyes burned fiercely. Upon seeing me, it gave a roar and charged forward, faster.
I had a few seconds to figure out how the turret worked, or the monster would kill me.
“Here goes nothing.”
I squeezed the trigger.
Nothing happened.
The Behemoth reached an arm back, its eyes igniting in bloodlust.
Anna popped out next to me.
“Try turning the safety off.”
She clicked it off. I squeezed the trigger.
A hail of bullets issued from the end of the gun, splattering the legs and abdomen of the monster. It bellowed in pain, but the skin was thick. I only seemed to piss it off and make it charge for us faster.
“Aim for the eyes!” Anna shouted.
I swiveled the weapon upward, holding it steady. I let the Behemoth have it again, and the bullets entered its neck and face. It gave a horrible wail, falling to its knees. I kept shooting. Somehow, I was able to train the gun on its face, and more bullets entered its head. The thing fell into the dirt and was inert. I didn’t stop shooting. I wanted to be sure it was really dead.
Anna grabbed my arm, making me release pressure from the trigger.
“It’s dead,” she said.
Indeed it was. The thing was slumped on the ground, purple, sticky liquid gushing from the holes I had made in its face.
We stood there a moment as the Recon kept driving. The cold wind chilled my face. My hands were still glued to the gun.
Anna put her hands on mine, and one by one released each of my fingers from the grips. She held them for a moment, looking into my eyes.
“You alright?”
“Yeah. Fine.”
“Let’s get inside,” she said. “Don’t want Makara to get lost.”
After I clicked the safety back on, we went back into the cargo bay and closed the hatch above us.
When we reentered the cab, everyone was ecstatic.
“Good job,” Samuel said. “Couldn’t have done it better myself.”
“Yeah,” Makara said. “Hopefully it’s clear sailing.”
The ground rose, leading us out of the canyon and back onto the arid, dune-ridden Boundless. Hundreds of dunes spread in all directions, stopped only by lines of jagged mountains far in the east. It would be hell trying to get through those. It was late afternoon, and the light was already failing.