I wanted to learn Joe’s location and send a message to Lucy. The rest didn’t matter to me. Tanya, Jax and Sam were on a mission to save the country but just a glance at the nasties following us along the road told me the country was already fucked.
If it was true that America was virus-free, then that was my ultimate destination. I wanted to sail there with Lucy, Joe and my parents. My lack of navigational skills meant I couldn’t guarantee if we would hit the coast of Florida or end up in Maine but anywhere was better than here. This place now belonged to the army and the virus. Let them fight it out. I wanted no part of it.
It would be a couple of hours before we reached the marina at this speed. I sat back in my seat and closed my eyes. The dream of reaching America with my family and Lucy seemed too far away to even think about.
I couldn’t think past the cold reality of our current situation.
I had no idea where Lucy was.
My family was trapped in an unknown Survivors Camp.
We were driving to a marina guarded by the military.
And our only weapon was a herd of fifty zombies.
fifteen
Almost two hours later, we reached the marina. The road we were on hit a crossroad ahead then carried on down a slope to the waterfront street where the marina shop was located.
We could see the cliffs ahead and beyond them, the rough sea churned beneath dark clouds.
Tanya looked at the zombie horde in the rear-view mirror. They still followed us. They were slow but relentless in their shambling pursuit. “We need to ditch the Land Rover,” she said. Her voice was tense.
There was no sign of the army and we couldn’t see the beach without going to the edge of the cliff. We knew they were down there, though. We knew we were putting ourselves in danger if we went down there.
We had to lead the zombies down the slope if we were going to create a diversion. Without the diversion, we had no way of stealing a boat.
“Everyone, get ready to bail,” Tanya said tightly. She pressed the brake, stopped the Land Rover and got out.
We all did the same. The zombies, seeing us on foot, moaned with hunger.
“What are we going to do?” I asked. “Just walk down there?”
“Do you have a better idea?” Tanya arranged the straps on her backpack and set off towards the crossroads.
The herd was getting closer.
With the zombies behind us and the army in front of us, we were truly between a rock and a hard place. I felt my hands trembling. My mouth was dry and my stomach felt queasy. Why had I agreed to this?
I held my baseball bat loosely, all too aware how useless it would be against guns.
The zombies had reached the Land Rover. They skirted around it, showing no interest in the abandoned vehicle. Their glaring yellow eyes were fixed on us, their intended prey.
“Let’s move,” Sam said, marching after Tanya.
Jax and I quickened our pace and we caught up with Tanya. There was a tense atmosphere in the air and I knew it was because of the seriousness of our situation. We were walking into an outpost of soldiers who would not hesitate to shoot us.
The order must have gone out to kill any civilians not in the camps. As far as the authorities were concerned, we may be alive now but we were probably going to get turned sooner or later. Better to kill us now and save the army having to fight us later when we joined the rotting ranks of the undead.
We reached the crossroads. The road ahead dipped down to the sea. A small white sign had the words, “Beach Road” on it in raised black letters. In days gone by, that sign had probably brought joy to the faces of children who had come here on holiday. Now, it made me feel sick to my stomach.
We descended the slope to the street below. I had an urge to run to the marina shop and grab all the boat keys there but we had to slow our pace to make sure all the nasties followed us.
The street was deserted but I could see the beach beyond the shops. Soldiers milled about on the sand, guns slung over their shoulders. A collection of Land Rovers and APCs was parked on the asphalt and the sand.
A shout went up and the sound of shots cracked the air.
They had seen the undead herd.
As they ran towards us, I led my companions along the street, past the supermarket and across the road to the marina shop.
I risked a quick glance over my shoulder, expecting to see the zombies shuffling towards the soldiers but the sight at the end of the street made my blood run cold.
The zombies were heading for the shops, shambling in through the open doorways.
They were easy targets for the soldiers.
More shots rang along the street and the zombies started falling as head shots blew their rotted brains out through their decaying skulls.
“Why aren’t they attacking the soldiers?” I whispered to Tanya.
“I don’t know,” she replied, “but this isn’t creating a diversion at all. The soldiers are just picking them off. Why are the zombies taking cover?”
Then everything became clear as a cold drop of water hit my arm, followed by another.
Our plan had failed.
It was raining.
sixteen
I pushed open the door of the shop and we got inside quickly, staying low and in the shadows. The shop was quiet and gloomy. I doubted anyone had been in here since I had hidden from the feral survivors.
Outside, the rain came down with a vengeance, lashing against the windows and battering on the glass door.
We sat in the darkness, leaning against the wall. An air of frustration hung over the group and it was completely understandable. We had spent hours luring zombies here to distract the military only to have them take cover from the rain and cause no problem at all for the soldiers.
“Now what do we do?” I asked.
“We could wait until it gets dark,” Jax suggested. “Sneak out there and try to get a boat before they spot us.”
“Or just wait until the rain stops,” I said. “Those zombies will come pouring out of the shops. The soldiers will have to deal with them.”
Tanya shook her head. “We’ve lost the element of surprise. They’ll deal with them easily now. Listen.”
Beyond the windows, shots continued. The zombies were being destroyed as they took cover. Soon they would all be dead—our only advantage lost because of the weather.
“So we’re trapped here,” I said.
“This sucks, man,” Sam added.
Tanya was quiet. She looked around the shop. “Does that door lead to the boats?”
I nodded. “Yeah. There’s a gravel beach that leads down to the water. The boats are all out there, tied to the jetties.”
She crept forward on her hands and knees and retrieved a small pair of black binoculars from the floor. Staying low, she shuffled to the windows that looked out over the marina and cautiously lifted her head. She frowned and brought the binoculars to her eyes, scanning the beach.
She adjusted the focus and whispered, “What the hell?”
“What is it?” Sam asked.
“I… don’t know. There are only a couple of soldiers on the jetties. Everyone else is on the beach. There’s a big tent there. I don’t know… take a look.”
Sam crept forward and took the binoculars. “What the fuck are they doing, man?”
The curiosity was killing me. I found a pair of binoculars on the floor and trained them on the sandy beach. The rain smeared the window and made it hard to see clearly but almost all of the soldiers were gathered outside a large olive tent.
They were lined up outside in the rain, filing in when they were called. Two Land Rovers parked next to the tent had the army medical symbol on their doors, a red cross in a white square.