Kia nodded. “I know and I respect your thinking, Chase; your decision. But it is not mine. I think it isn’t that bad here. I’m staying at the school. Everything we need is here. Everything.”
“Those supplies will run out,” Melissa said.
“And I’ll worry about that when it actually happens,” Kia said. “We have the weapons that you had in the trunk of your car, and they’ll--we can keep those weapons, Melissa, Gene? Can’t we? You’re not taking back all of those weapons?”
Everyone tensed. I saw hands tighten on rifles.
“They’re yours. Everything here, it’s yours. The bus is stocked. Prepped. We’re not taking anything from you. I wouldn’t do that. But, Andy, you’re sure?” Gene said. “I am not comfortable leaving you. I’m really not.”
Andy looked at the people behind him. They each cast a silent ballot with a slight nod. “We are,” Andy said. “We’re going to be okay.”
“I don’t like it,” Gene said to Melissa, like they might be the only two in the room.
I understood the man’s sense of feeling torn. “Gene, I think you guys should all talk. It’s something we can discuss in the morning. I would never want to be the one to come between you and your family. The road is going to be very dangerous. At some point, we may have to leave your bus because of things blocking the way. This is not going to be an easy journey.”
Not an easy and maybe not even a smart journey. This school wasn’t so bad. It did have everything, and was close enough to surrounding woods that eventually hunting for food and other supplies might not be as deadly a task as it was currently. Maybe we all needed a night to think things over.
Gene nodded, wrapped an arm around his wife’s shoulders. “You’re a good man, Chase. And I agree with you. I do. It’s very late. We should get some sleep, and in the morning, we can talk more. That sound alright?”
“Yes,” I said. “Sounds fine.”
“We’ve set the gym up like a mini-hotel. We pulled cots from the nurse’s office, and gym mats to use as beds, and separated the gym with play props for borders,” Melissa said, and smiled. “It’s not so bad.”
“I’m sure it’s not,” Allison said.
“Andy has sentry duty. Walks the halls, keeps an eye on things. It’s a one level school, but it’s spread out over a lot of land. We take turns doing this each night, using a rotation. Everyone has a turn,” Gene said.
“Good system,” Dave said. “I think I’ll stay up with Andy. Get a feel for the place.”
“That’s not necessary,” Melissa said.
“I want to, though. As long as it is alright with you, Andy?”
“I’d love the company.”
Gene clapped his hands. “Sounds like a plan then.”
Chapter Fifteen
Tuesday, November 3rd, 0725 hours
I woke up first. Allison, Charlene and I slept close to one another. The blue wrestling mat served well as a mattress. Walking around white tri-fold room dividers --more than likely from the nurse’s office, I saw that the gymnasium was ours, and ours alone.
While the plan had been to talk before bed, we’d all been exhausted. As soon as we’d settled in, we’d fallen asleep. I’d slept well. Felt very rested, but no less conflicted.
Mexico.
I couldn’t even remember what the radio broadcast announced, not exactly. That had been only an hour or so after Rochester had been severely hit with the outbreak, when Allison and I had been fleeing the 9-1-1 Center, and the journey to find and save my kids had first begun. The guy on the radio said people in poorer countries such as Mexico did not have the government funding to vaccinate their people. That the borders set up to keep illegal aliens out of the U.S. were now being used to keep infected Americans out of a less contaminated Mexico.
That had been about it. The extent of it.
It would be a no-brainer if we lived in Texas or anywhere near the Rio Grande. We didn’t. We weren’t anywhere near the south. We were thousands of miles away from the border. Was a bus with a cow scooper really going to be the salvation to deliver us to this massive wall?
It seemed doubtful. Unrealistic and disheartening.
The school really was a fortress. Possibly impregnable. The kitchen was huge. There were generators, and a room stocked with batteries to keep those generators running at least through the winter if incorporated discipline and restraint was used, so as to not drain all the juice in the first months or two.
If the Terrigino brothers’ place hadn’t burned to the ground, the cabin up along the St. Lawrence would have been ideal. But ideal because the area was isolated. Not as heavily populated as a Pennsylvania county. The cabin sat up high. Was more easily defendable. The problem had been the craziness of the brothers. Fighting a few zombies here and there was nothing compared to having to take those hunters out as well.
Winter was coming. That was surely a con. Generators or not. But was it really a negative, a con?
“Chase?” Allison said.
I moved back around the tri-fold. She was up on an elbow, hair disheveled. She looked beautiful. “Hey,” I said, and spoke softly. Charlene was still asleep.
Allison stood up, stretched. If I didn’t just see her wake up and know she was still groggy, I’d have sworn she was a zombie the way she walked; clumsy steps, ankle twisting, feet slapping onto the mat and then onto the gymnasium floor, thick with layers of polyurethane.
“What were you doing?” she said, wrapping her arms around my waist, and pressing her head to my chest.
I held her, my arms squeezing just as tight. It felt good, her warmth against me. I’d slept in the middle last night, between Charlene and her. It was not the same. I kissed her forehead. “Trying to figure out what’s what, you know? If Mexico is right or wrong.”
“I’m going wherever you go. So will Dave. You’ve got to know that by now.”
“I know that. I do. That’s the problem. I don’t know where to go. I’ve made a million choices over the last few days. Not all of them good. Some of them, no, many of them put peoples’ lives at risk. I am responsible for people dying.”
“No, you’re--”
“I am, Allison.” I ground my teeth. “It’s easy for people to look at what I’ve done and judge the mistakes I’ve made. I’ve tried though.”
“Who’s judging you?”
“I am.” I pointed at my chest. “Me.”
“Do you want to go to Mexico?” she said. “Do you think Mexico is the place we should head for? Chase?”
“I think we need to move south. Winter’s coming. It’s going to be cold here. Very, very cold.”
Allison dropped her hands to her sides. “Can I say something?”
“You know you can.” I reached for one of her hands.
“What if, like with rain, the snow annoys them? It’s frozen rain, right? And eventually, that snow will melt. It will be rainy for the next several weeks before winter really hits. And then rainy after winter. We’re not all that far from Rochester, really. The weather in western New York is practically the same here.”
“Or worse.”
“Okay. Worse. I’ll give you that. We get a solid, what, two or two and half months of summer? But the rest of the time is either rain, or snow,” she said. Maybe it was because I stayed silent that she became apprehensive. “It was just an idea. Just--it was just something I was thinking.”
“No, Alley. No. I -- I get it. I see what you’re saying. I do.” I almost clapped a hand to my forehead. The obvious was that obvious, but I’d never seen it. Not like this, not until Allison pointed it out.
“Seriously? Because I was also thinking about what that woman… Megan…was saying. If rigor mortis is setting in, maybe the cold, the winter will wipe them out? I mean, unless they get smart enough to find shelter for the winter, you saw them, they just stumble about. A harsh Pennsylvania winter, Chase, it could kill them.”