Read Coyote Online

Authors: David L. Foster

Tags: #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #Alternate History, #Post-Apocalyptic, #Alternative History, #Dystopian

Coyote (21 page)

Bait was next to the Mule, ineffectually slapping at something on the Mule’s chest and adding his own cries to the noise, while the dog was barking madly at the whole scene.

She ran to the commotion, as did the Professor and Beast. Coming closer, she saw something latched to the Mule’s chest, rapidly twitching and dodging the Mule’s swipes. The thing was dark colored, insectile-looking and perhaps as big as the Mule’s forearm. As he swatted at it, the thing slammed a single, sharp appendage into his chest again and again, making a quick thumping sound, almost like a woodpecker. The speed of the blows at it pistoned its heavy claw into the Mule’s chest was astounding, making the thing’s arm blur, and almost melding the thuds of its blows against the Mule’s armored chest into a low, thumping buzz. The blows didn’t seem to be penetrating the armor in the Mule’s jacket, but they had to hurt.

She began to tentatively stab at the thing on the Mule’s chest with her knife, but since she was trying to avoid both Bait’s and the Mule’s hands as they beat at the thing, her efforts were largely futile. They had to get it off soon, because it wouldn’t be long before the thing found the parts of the jacket that weren’t armored and started doing some real damage.

Behind her came a yell from the Professor. “Move!”

She turned to see him swinging a large, heavy-looking metal tray in her direction. She ducked just in time, and the tray slammed into the thing on the Mule’s chest. Pulling the tray back, the Professor saw that the thing was stunned by this new attack, but definitely not out of the fight. He began slamming the tray into the Mule’s chest again and again, beating at the thing, accompanied by cries of “Ow, ow,” and “stop!” from the Mule as he stumbled backward under the combined attacks of the thing on his chest and the Professor, finally ending up against a wall with nowhere left to go.

The thing’s attacks slowed considerably, but it still clung grimly onto the Mule’s jacket, taking the occasional stab at him as the Professor drew back for the next swing of the tray.

The next escalation came from Beast. She felt a tug at her waist, and turned to see Beast drawing the hatchet from the sheath at her waist. He then pushed her and the Professor to the side, slammed his hand onto the tray to hold it against the thing on Mule’s chest, and raised a hatchet over his head, preparing to bring it down on the tray, the thing beneath the tray, and the Mule’s chest, all at once.

There was time for a startled yelp from Bait as he turned away, covering his face, and a cry of “No!” from the Mule, who was pressed against the wall with no way to avoid the coming blow.

Beast’s arm came down in a powerful blow, denting the tray with a huge “Clang.”

The Mule made a grunting exhalation as Beast drew back for a second, and then a third blow.

It wasn’t until the second blow that she saw Beast had reversed the hatchet and was pounding into his target with the flat rear of the hatchet, instead of the blade.

After his fourth blow, Beast paused, still holding the tray, seeming to consider whether more of a beating was needed, but the Mule didn’t give him a chance to resume.

“Fuck you!” he cried, his face twisted in rage. “Stop!”

With that the Mule brought his arms up behind the tray and gave a surprisingly powerful shove, pushing the tray off his chest and into his attacker’s face, almost lifting Beast off his feet, knocking him back several steps and causing him to stumble backwards until he banged the back of his head against the still-open freezer door with an audible thump.

The thing slid limply off of the Mule’s chest, obviously done, and the Mule slid down the wall, making wheezing, choking noises.

Dropping to one knee, she stabbed her knife into the thing on the floor a few times to make sure of it, then flipped it back into the freezer, from where it must have come.

All was silent now, except the wheezing and occasional cursing coming from the Mule as he rubbed his chest, and the somewhat louder cursing of the Beast as he rubbed the back of his head.

Then Mule looked up at Beast. “What the
fuck
man?!”

Beast looked up at him, his face darkening, and the Mule stared back, looking equally angry. She stood, preparing to stop them from lunging at each other, when suddenly the Mule’s angry face crumpled and he started laughing.

“Oh, God,” he got out between wheezy laughs. “You beat me with an
axe
! Oh, man. Oh, it hurts. Laughing hurts.”

Beast’s face cleared right away as he started to laugh himself, a low, rumbling chuckle. Nervous chuckles came from the rest of the group as well, as Beast stood, then reached a hand down to the Mule and helped him stand off the floor. They stood with their hands clasped for a moment, and then both pulled in at the same time for a one-handed embrace with their hands still clasped together at their chests.

The Mule and Beast pulled back and let each other go as the tension eased and the laughter became more real.

“That’s the best way to make a friend,” said Bait. “Beat the snot out of him.”

The Mule smiled at Beast. “Any time you need me to beat you with an axe, I’m there for you.”

“I appreciate that, man,” answered Beast.

 

---

 

With the tension gone from the room, the group got back to business. The Mule was sore, but he could stand, he could walk, and he said it didn’t hurt too much unless he took deep breaths. That was about all that people had time for in the way of sympathy in this new world, so they turned to other things—or one other thing: the dead thing on the floor.

Looking at the thing that had been on the Mule’s chest, they all marveled at its truly alien construction. It had six legs, a head, and almost looked like a praying mantis that had grown to the size of a small dog. Its body was hard, but covered with tiny bristles, each about a half-inch long. They were too sparse and stiff to be called hair, looking more like little antennas than anything else. The strangest part of it, though, was the right, front leg. That leg was larger and thicker by far than any of the others, with the tip bulging out into a teardrop shape with a sharp point at the end. The teardrop and the point changed from the dark gray shell-like body of the rest of the animal, becoming silver and shining dully in the light. This appendage was what the thing had been attacking the Mule with as it clung to his chest with the rest of its legs, and it weighed more than twice as much as the rest of the thing’s body did. The weight and the speed with which the thing was able to use its attacking leg explained why it had packed such a powerful punch.

“You know,” said the Professor, “we’ve got to know what we’re going to call these, these… whatever they are, that we keep running across.”

“Why?” asked Beast. “They’re all just things for us to kill or to let kill us. Isn’t that enough?”

The Professor rolled his eyes. “It may not be. Think about it. You peek around a corner, you see this thing lying in wait, and you want to warn the others about what you see. You may not have time to say ‘It’s one of those little cat-sized things with the claw at the front that stabs at you, dark gray, with the bristly skin…’ On the other hand, if we’ve seen something before you could just see it and say ‘there’s a… a…’”

“A thumper,” interjected Bait.

The Professor waved his hand towards Bait. “There’s a thumper around the corner.”

“It makes sense,” she said. “So this is a thumper.”

“OK,” said the Mule, “But I’m confused about this thumper.”

They all looked at him questioningly.

“I mean, yeah, the little bugger was pretty vicious, but it was nothing compared to all the other crap we’ve seen. I mean, a few good whacks and it’s toast. What kind of threat is that?”

“Maybe it’s not a threat,” responded the Professor. “Maybe it’s like a wolverine or something. It’ll leave you alone unless you disturb it. Maybe it was nesting here, and we frightened it.”

“Nesting in a rotting freezer?” asked Bait.

“But look at the way it attacked me,” the Mule said to the Professor. “It just jumped right out at me. No posturing, no backing off, no growling, nothing. It just went straight into attack mode as soon as it saw me. And no thought to defense, either. It just kept pounding away, even when we were smacking at it. It didn’t even try to save itself.

“If you ask me, that’s a pretty poor predator. I mean, how is that kind of thing supposed to survive as a species if it just attacks everything it sees, even if what it attacks is an even bigger predator?”

“Maybe this one isn’t supposed to be by itself,” she suggested.

The Mule picked up on the idea quickly. “She’s right. Maybe these thumpers operate in groups or packs. Maybe they’re like ants or bees. Who cares if a couple of ants get killed while attacking the caterpillar, because a thousand ants biting on that caterpillar can bring it down and bring back enough food to feed the whole nest for a month.”

“That might make sense,” said the Professor. “We didn’t have too tough a time with one thumper, but maybe this one got left behind somehow. Maybe he got stuck in the freezer accidentally and the rest of them took off to wherever their next destination was. It wouldn’t go so well if you were attacked by a hundred of those things.”

The thought put a chill in the room as they all stared down at the dead thumper, each imagining hundreds like it swarming over the group.

“Well that’s just creepy,” said Bait. “Thanks for that thought, but can we talk about something else?”

“He is right,” she said. “Enough time wasted on speculation. Back to seeing if you can find anything of use here.”

They all turned back to what they had been doing, searching through the restaurant for anything they could scavenge. Most of the food was nothing a person would want to touch anymore, but they did find a few large bags of chopped peanuts that were still good, and some dry but still edible hamburger buns. Condiments like ketchup and mustard seemed to be just fine, but nobody was sure what they would do with a gallon of ketchup. A few of them did grab handfuls of the little condiment packets from the front of the restaurant and stuff them into their packs. Perhaps those packets could make whatever they ate in the future just a bit more palatable.

There were also stacks and stacks of the little cones waiting for soft-serve ice cream to be put in them. Those seemed no worse for having waited about a month, but they were so bulky and probably had so little nutritional value that nobody was interested in them.

She was about ready to move on when Bait came stumbling out of the now-open freezer.

“Guys! Guys! Look!” The excitement in his voice drew them all to him as he set a cardboard box on one of the counters. It was a medium-sized box, but from the way it thumped onto the counter it sounded fairly heavy.

“What’s that?” asked the Mule.

“Well, I was digging around in the freezer—“

“Aw, man, that’s gross!” interrupted Beast. The expression on the faces of the others showed general agreement. Nobody could imagine anything worth finding in a pile of formerly frozen food that had been left to rot for a month.

“God, that’s right,” added the Mule. “And that thing had been living in there for who knows how long, probably crapping on stuff, or whatever they do that’s the equivalent of crapping on stuff.”

“Ok, yeah,” admitted Bait. “It was kinda gross. But I got this!” He proudly gestured to the box on the counter.

“And this is what?” she asked.

“Towards the back, I was seeing what was there and I noticed some of the stuff was still a little cold. I knocked a few layers off the pile, and started finding things that were really cold—almost frozen still. There were a bunch of boxes like this, some on the top that were warm and rotten, but at the bottom were some ones that were still really cold. And at the bottom of the pile was this. This case of still-frozen hamburger patties!”

“No way,” said the Mule.

“Yes! And look,” he turned the box over, on the table, showing all sides. “Still sealed! I bet these babies are still good to eat!” He looked at the group, grinning.

The faces of the others showed doubt, but at least it was no longer disgust.

“How could they still be frozen?” she asked, looking at the Professor.

“How should I know?” he asked. “I’m no chef or anything. I mean, I guess the rest of the things in there could keep the bottom of the pile insulated, and the freezer itself, if nobody ever opened it, would stay cold for quite a while, I suppose.”

“Open it, man!” suggested Beast. There was urgency in his voice, and his eyes were wide.

Bait took out his machete and quickly sliced through the tape at the top of the box while the others took a hasty step back to avoid his enthusiastic sawing. Inside were, as promised, layers and layers of pre-made hamburger patties—a hundred and twenty of them, if the labeling on the box could be trusted.

There was a moment of silence from the group.

“Hold on a sec,” said the Professor, turning away and moving to the other side of the kitchen. “I think these grills are gas. The ignition was probably electric and won’t work anymore, but…” he trailed off as he fiddled with the knobs. “Yes. Somebody give me a match or a lighter.”

The Mule pulled a long barbeque lighter out of one of the outside pockets of his pack, handing it over to the Professor. After a few minutes of fiddling they managed to lift the cooking surface and get the lighter to the gas jets beneath, the Professor turned on the gas as the Mule held the lighter to the jets. Soon everyone heard the satisfying whoosh of the burners lighting.

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