Read The Last Peak (Book 2): The Darwin Collapse Online

Authors: William Oday

Tags: #Post-Apocalyptic | Infected

The Last Peak (Book 2): The Darwin Collapse (5 page)

The other men that had surrounded Mr. Raybury’s body now circled around the fight in progress. They hooted and hollered and called out bets like it was a dog fight.

CRACK.

The leader shot a round into the air.

“Enough! Get your asses up and stop messing around, or I’ll kill you both myself.” He aimed the pistol at the two fighters. They rolled apart and got to their feet in a hurry.

“Sorry, boss.”

A loud, screeching sound came from the hallway at Mason’s back.

Clyde.

His call for attention wasn’t insanely loud. It was just that almost any sound was loud in the newly muffled world.

Mason heard Beth’s footfalls as she sprinted for Theresa’s bedroom. She spoke to the chimp in a calming, reassuring tone.

Another screech.

Shit.

The men across the street all turned as one. The leader tilted his head like a dog trying to understand something. He waved his pistol at Mason’s house. “Go check it out.”

CHAPTER EIGHT

Four rough-looking men sauntered across the street pushing and shoving at each other like they were all just out for another Saturday night with the boys.

Idiots.

But four of them. All armed. At least they’d split their forces. Mason would have to handle the first four quickly before the other three got involved. He wasn’t in the Marine Corps anymore. His family members weren’t trained soldiers. They weren’t ready for a large number of deadly aggressors.
 

His wife carried a Glock 19 identical to his own. It was a good idea for parts redundancy and caliber commonality. She was trained well beyond what the average citizen achieved, but still, she was not and never had been a soldier.

She’d never killed anyone. She’d never lost someone in battle. How she might react was a wildcard in a situation with too many variables already.

And so that left him.

One against many.

The odds were not in his favor. Not that it mattered. His family was in danger. When your back was against the wall, you did what you had to do. Not because you were a hero. Not because you were cut from a more formidable cloth than mere mortals.

You did it because it had to be done and nobody else was going to do it for you.

You did it, or you died trying. Such was life out on the edge.

Mason narrowed the curtain opening to a sliver as the four men crossed his front yard. The first two bounded up the porch steps. The second one planted a boot on the loose second step and it collapsed to the side. He tumbled over, arms wheeling. He went down hard on the pavement.

CRACK.

A round discharged and hit the guy in front. The shot tore into his leg. He screamed and collapsed forward. The shooter on the ground looked around in a daze.

The loose step had been a result of domestic laziness rather than a premeditated trap, but it worked nonetheless. He’d reset it if they made it through this encounter.

The bearded man ran across the street hurling threats and insults. His face turned beet red as spittle flew from his lips. His pants slipped down under his protruding belly and he yanked them up with one hand while waving the pistol with the other.

He kicked the shooter in the gut before bounding up onto the porch. With his pants situated, the bearded man helped his wounded friend to his feet.

“Goddamnit,” he said, “what are we going to do with you? Think we’re just gonna head over to the ER and get you fixed up?”

He shook his head.
 

“Morons. We don’t need those filthy bastards to kill us off. We’re doing a damn fine job of that ourselves.”

 
Now only inches away beyond the plate glass, Mason could see just how filthy and disheveled these people were. The boss’s beard was encrusted with what looked like dark mud. Bright red droplets covered his face. His jeans were ripped at the knees and as much brown as their original blue. His short-sleeve button-up hung open and a sizable belly spilled out. Bright blood created a new pattern on the gray shirt. Older patterns showed a history of his misdeeds.

Mason aimed the front sight of the Glock at the man’s chest. Two shots and he’d be down. Maybe the rest would panic and run. Brave men could fall to fear when their anchor was torn away.

The leader waved to the two men standing dumbfounded in the front yard. “You two, check out the damn house! And do your best not to kill each other!”

“You got it, boss,” one said.

The leader helped the injured man down the steps and landed another hard kick on the shooter as they passed.

The front door knob jiggled.
 

It jiggled harder.

“It’s locked, boss.”

“Then kick it down!”

THUD.

A boot slammed into the wooden door. The frame shuddered but held fast.

THUD. THUD.

The noise stopped and the door didn’t budge. Mason silently thanked the builder for choosing solid oak.

“Not budging, boss.”

“Lord help me! I’m dealing with idiots! Shoot the damn lock out!”

Mason pivoted away from the door as a handgun’s report rang in his ears.

“Missed it, boss.”

“Jesus H. Christ! I should kill you myself! Forget the door! Kick the window in!”

“Yeah, okay. Good idea.”

Mason’s pointer finger slid inside the guard and gently rested on the trigger. Three men were now in his immediate field of fire. He was confident in dispatching them, but the remaining three and the wounded guy were less certain.

Less certain
sank a cold stone into the depths of his belly. He swallowed hard and found no saliva to help.

It was time to do his job.

But failure meant his entire family would die.

The would-be invader squared up to the window that Mason was next to. Mason backed up, still keeping the window at an angle, and aimed his weapon where the man’s chest would be behind the heavy curtains.

SMASH.

The plate glass caved in and pushed into the closed curtain. Fragments clattered to the wood floor.
 

As soon as the curtain parted…

Any second now…

A keening shriek from outside caught Mason off guard. The primal fury of it jolted him. It wasn’t human. But it wasn’t an animal he recognized either.

A voice from further away shouted, “Boss! It’s them! We gotta get outta here!”

“Yeah, I know! Let’s go!”

“What about me? I can’t run with a bullet in my leg!”

The bearded man answered in a flat tone. “You know where to find us if you make it.”

“Don’t leave me!”

Mason peeked through the curtains. The injured man hobbled down the street after his fleeing companions.

Leaving an injured man behind.
 

Scumbags.

They all deserved no better than whatever befell their injured brother. And he didn’t deserve any good turns either.

“What was that sound?”

“Beth,” he whispered, “you’re supposed to be in the kitchen!”

“Barefoot and pregnant, I know,” she said with grim humor.

Leave it to his wife to stay cucumber cool, even in situations she had no experience with. Part of it came from operating on sick animals. She’d had her share of unwelcome surprises in surgery. But losing her head would achieve nothing more than losing her patient.
 

That was part of it.

But the other part was just who she was. He was blessed beyond words.

“What was that?” she whispered.

“Don’t know. But it set a gang of seven armed looters running scared like the devil himself was at their heels.”

CHAPTER NINE

Mason stood guard by the window for the next two hours waiting for the source of the noise to show itself, or waiting for the looters to return to finish their business. His legs alternated tingling numbness, but nothing else came to pass.

The quiet minutes wore on, oblivious to the distance they accumulated between the present and the last breath of his neighbor lying across the street.

“I’ll keep watch,” Beth said as she squeezed his shoulder. “You need to get ready for tonight.”

He held her eyes and she simply nodded.

What did he ever do to deserve her?
 

She understood the risk, but she also knew that holing up with dwindling supplies was a plan with a very definite end, and that end was no better than what might happen out there tonight.

“You’re not the boss of me,” Mason replied with a lopsided grin. The levity was forced, but it was better than lumbering around filled with morose dread.

“Not as far as you know. But a woman has her ways.”

“Duly noted,” Mason replied as he hugged her tight.

He checked in on everyone else and found the household in a more relaxed, if still concerned, posture.

Elio watched Theresa feed Clyde formula. The tender look in his eye was something Mason filed away for future consideration.

Iridia was in what used to be his and Beth’s shared office. She’d overtaken it completely, which was saying something considering she’d arrived at his house with little more than a backless dress and a pair of high heels.

He brushed through the rainbow of tapestries that draped across the doorway.
 

Mr. Piddles turned sideways, arching his back and hissing like a leaking tire.
 

“So this is where it’s been hanging out.”


It
is a
him
. And you’re upsetting him,” Iridia said as she rolled off a yoga mat and stroked the cat’s back to calm it down.

“Well, cat piss on my pillow is upsetting to me. So we’re even.”

Iridia rubbed under its neck. “Don’t listen to him, honey. You’re a sweetie.” She kissed its whiskered snout.
 

Mason noticed the office didn’t stink. Mr. Piddles must’ve chosen him to the be the lucky recipient of its expressive nature.

Iridia rolled back to the mat and bent up like a pretzel, supporting her body weight balanced on her hands. She didn’t weigh that much, but still, it was impressive.

“Yoga,” she said. “Good for staying calm. Stress can make your body store more fat, and it can also cause premature wrinkles. Want to join?”

“Nah, thanks,” Mason said. “I’ve earned my wrinkles.”

He went around the house, verifying that all points of entry were secured. They were, in so far as being locked. But a large number of plate glass windows, including the shattered one by the front door, made the house utterly insecure on a practical level. They’d have to board up everything, starting with the broken window, if he could scrounge up enough plywood.

Should’ve done it days ago but between being beat up and not really believing it could all fall apart so fast, fortifying their position hadn’t gotten done. He’d have to get on it tomorrow. Tonight’s supply run came first. His attention was required there first. Besides, they might learn something tonight that would affect their planning tomorrow.

Mason headed to the master bedroom and closed the door. He pulled off his shirt and recoiled at the stink emanating from it. He’d missed the window of afternoon warmth that made bathing in the backyard reasonably bearable. What passed for bathing these days… half a gallon of increasingly stale pool water and a single squirt of body soap.
 

The pool water from two houses down was no doubt a godsend, but it wouldn’t be that way forever. At first, the chlorine made their skin itchy. Now that most of the chlorine had broken down, the water no longer dried out their skin, but it did leave a musty odor. And the odor was growing. He’d have to dig through the neighbor’s shed and figure out how to dose the pool with more chlorine.

He settled for a quick minute scrubbing a wet wipe over his stinkiest parts.

Relatively refreshed, he donned black pants, belt, and a black sweatshirt. He reverently laid out the tools of his trade on the bedroom dresser. He looked forward to preparing for the evening’s excursion, to the ritual he’d performed countless times in his years as a close protection officer.

Gearing up.

A sanctuary of ordered progress in a broken world.

Something to keep him grounded and sane.

Though his gear no longer occupied the hood of a humvee, it gave him the same sense of mental preparation.

Preparing for battle.

For the unknown.

He picked up the 9mm Glock 19 and checked the chamber. Empty. He slammed in a fifteen round magazine, racked the slide, and checked the chamber. Hot. He holstered it inside his waistband. Next, a ten round magazine clipped to his belt. Next, the Glock 26. Same process. Hot. Into the ankle holster on his right leg. The Bonowi 26” collapsible baton clipped to his hip. In less than a second, he could wield a big, and very hard, stick. The Cold Steel Recon one-handed tactical knife clipped to his belt. Finally, four pairs of disposable handcuffs clipped to the belt at the small of his back.

No tie this evening.
 

That part was unusual, not that he missed it. He never understood why hanging a cloth noose around your neck made you more respectable.

He remembered the last time he’d geared up, tie and all, and ended up meeting Iridia at her hotel room. Him praying she didn’t turn out to be crazy. Her opening the door completely naked but for the towel wrapped around her head.

If only the insanity had stopped there.
 

Unfortunately, that was just the beginning.

He checked himself in the mirror and laughed when he realized he was staring. He looked suspicious. Made sense. He wouldn’t trust anyone dressed like he was. But the dark color made situational sense. They were going out at dusk and darker clothes drew less attention.

Above all things, they wanted to avoid attention.

He grabbed a black LA Galaxy cap on his way out of the bedroom.

Time to check on Theresa and load up the Bronco. He didn’t relish the thought of what she might be exposed to this evening.
 

But shielding her from the new world was no longer an option.

CHAPTER TEN

ELIZABETH WEST
carried a stuffed backpack out to the Bronco in the backyard. Her hands trembled, not from the weight of the pack but from the weight on her heart. The two people she loved most in the world were about to risk a supply run. She understood the need, but it didn’t make it any easier to accept. Her tongue felt fat and useless in her mouth. Her thoughts veered toward mad despair, and she fought to rein them in.
 

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