There was so much blood. Jesus, why was there so much blood?
Keo picked her jacket back up and pushed it against her chest. She seemed to seize up, maybe from the pressure he was putting on her, but he didn’t ease up because the bleeding needed to be stopped at all cost.
“Shoot for center mass. Then take out the brain to make sure.”
Everyone knew that, from the cops to the military grunts to guys like him. You always shot for center mass — the chest — to get the target down, then you finished him off with a head shot. It was SOP. Whoever was out there — whoever had taken the shot — had done exactly that.
Jordan continued to blink up at him, and there was a hollowness to her eyes that didn’t belong. The Jordan he knew — who had kept her friends alive after the end of the world, who had saved his miserable life last night — was full of life. But he didn’t see that right now. There was only sadness looking back up at him.
“You’ll be fine,” he said. “I’ve stopped the bleeding. No one boinks me in a barn and gets to just run away.”
Her eyes widened, that familiar Jordan life coming back, if just for a split second, and her lips somehow managed to form a smile.
He returned it, or thought he did. He focused on her eyes, on her pained face, and forgot (and didn’t care) to react to the pounding footsteps crossing the highway, just a few seconds before a figure leaped into the ditch in front of him.
He heard similar sounds behind him and knew another one was back there.
“Shit, got one,” a voice said. Male. Young. Keo could practically feel the giddiness dripping from his every word.
He tore his eyes away from Jordan’s paling face and looked up as a man (boy) moved cautiously toward him. He had black, brown, and green paint over his face and was wearing some kind of Ghillie suit stuffed with brown straw and grass. He was cradling an AR-15 with a large scope on top, the weapon covered in the same camo pattern as his face. A gun belt, with a holstered sidearm, stuck out of his right hip.
“Don’t fucking move,” the man said. He was trying to sound menacing and doing a poor job of it. Despite the face paint, he couldn’t have been more than twenty.
Behind Keo, the second ambusher shuffled closer, too.
Keo looked back down at Jordan, at the thin smile frozen on her lips. There was a peaceful expression on her face, belying the fact she had just been shot in the chest and had bled enough for both of them.
The man in front of him leaned forward and peeked down at Jordan. “Dead center, Bill. Nice shot.”
Bill, the man behind Keo, said, “Told you. And yours went wide.”
“Not my fault; he dropped on me.”
“What’s that, two for me and one for you?”
“Sounds right.”
“You see a uniform on them?”
“Nope,” the one in front of him said. “Civilian?”
“Don’t take any chances. These collaborators can be sneaky.”
They’re Mercer’s men, Keo thought as he listened to their back and forth.
But even as his mind processed that information, he couldn’t take his eyes off Jordan, lying in his lap. Her body had gone completely still, but her face remained serene as he stroked her cheeks and brushed at strings of tears falling from the corners of her eyes. There was blood on her lips, and he thumbed them away gently.
He sighed and closed his eyes. Just for a brief second.
When he opened them again, he focused on his surroundings. The young one in front of him, the older-sounding one behind him. The soft wind blowing through the fields around all three of them, causing the grass to sway to his left and skirting across the highway to his right, picking up some of the debris from the crash. But most of all, the bright red of Jordan’s blood on his hands, sticking to his fingers.
“The flyer,” Keo said.
“What?” the young one said.
“The flyer,” he said again, pulling the piece of paper out of Jordan’s back pocket and holding it up. It was wet with her blood.
The one in front of him took two steps forward and snatched the paper out of Keo’s hand. He flicked it open, glanced at it once, then looked past Keo at Bill. “It’s one of ours.”
“‘Join the fight to take back Texas,’” Keo said. “‘War is here. Pick a side.’ That’s what we did. We picked a side.”
“The fuck is he saying, Luke?” Bill asked.
“It’s from the flyer,” the man named Luke said, holding the paper, covered in Jordan’s blood and tire tracks, up for the other man to see. “I guess he’s saying he came looking for us, to sign up?”
“Bullshit. It’s a trick.”
Luke had let both arms drop to his sides, including the right hand with the AR-15. “But that’s why we dropped them in the first place, right? To get recruits?”
“They didn’t say anything about bringing in recruits,” Bill said. “That’s not our job.”
Keo wondered how much older Bill was compared to Luke. Maybe he should interject, say something to help push Luke along. He had a feeling whether he lived or died was going to be decided in the next few seconds, and Luke was going to play a very big part of it.
“Yeah, but the flyer,” Luke said, holding it up again.
Bill sighed. “Shit.” Then, clearly annoyed, “You checked him for weapons?”
“He only had that tire iron, and he dropped it back on the road.” He looked down at Keo. “So, you wanna join up, huh?”
Keo ignored his question, and said instead, “I need help with her.”
“What for? She’s dead.”
“She’s still alive.”
“No way.” Luke leaned in to get a better look. He was close enough Keo could smell dirt and sweat on his body underneath the Ghillie suit. “You sure?”
“She’s still alive,” Keo said, looking up at him. “I stopped the bleeding, but I need to dress the wound. The bullet missed vital organs, from what I can tell. You got a first-aid kit?”
“Damn,” Luke said, and slung his rifle.
“What are you doing?” Bill asked, alarmed.
“Relax; I told you, he’s unarmed,” Luke said. “I was watching him the whole time, remember?”
“Be careful.”
“Yeah, yeah.” The young man knelt in front of Keo and reached into one of the pouches along his belt. He leaned in closer to get a better look at Jordan at the same time. “You sure she’s even breathing, man?”
“Dammit, kid, don’t get too close,” Bill said.
Luke might have been on the verge of saying something back, but he never got the chance because Keo brought out his right hand, the one with the spork, and jammed it into the side of Luke’s neck.
“Fuck!” Bill shouted.
Keo lunged forward while simultaneously pulling Luke toward him, using the handle of the lodged spork as leverage. He jerked his legs out from under Jordan’s limp form and slid behind Luke.
“Fuck!” Bill shouted again.
Keo slid one arm around Luke’s neck, clamping his struggling body against his own, while his right hand dropped to Luke’s hip, blood-covered fingers searching out the young man’s holstered gun among the grass and straws.
“Let him go!” Bill shouted.
Bill had lifted his rifle — another AR-15—and was shuffling his feet less than two meters away. Keo hadn’t realized how close the man had been to him. Bill was wearing a Ghillie suit that was almost identical to Luke’s, and his face was covered in the same camo pattern. He clutched and unclutched his rifle even as he swayed left and right, trying to line up a shot on Keo.
But Bill didn’t shoot, because Keo was using Luke as a shield and doing everything possible not to expose his head for a clear shot. Luke’s body spasmed uncontrollably in front of him, the younger man’s hands groping for the spork sticking out of the side of his throat like some cancerous appendage.