Thursday, November 27, 2014

IN THE FLESH: PART TWENTY

Genre: Horror (Zombies)
 

ROLL CALL


Carson Ryder: Former marine/Former police officer/Suffers from retrograde amnesia/ Searching for clues to his past
Damien Albright: Found and saved Carson/Was married once/Bad tempered/Doesn’t seem to care at all about family or traditional values
Kenny Sudrow: Youngest member of the group/Former spa porter/Happy to be doing something else/Lost his family to Biters
Eli Burton: Survivor found in Cherrywood Mall/Parents were rich and left him a large inheritance when they died
Valentina Jackson: Tough as nails/Has no fear/Knows how to use a gun/Claims to have crossed paths with Carson’s wife and daughter at one point in Tennessee
Tyler Reese: A young man who saved Kenny Sudrow’s life/Carries a submachine gun/A native Bostonian/He used to be a mechanic
Taryn Mills: One of the newest members of the group/Little is known about her at this time
Diego Garcia: A ticking time bomb
Nikki Fox: A native of Tennessee/Former registered nurse
 

IN THE FLESH
By Daniel Skye
 

PART TWENTY
BURNING MAN

 
          Day Two Hundred and Seventeen.
          The road had not been kind to them.
          They had encountered Biters galore as they refused stray from the path of the Interstate. Carson tried to use his machete when feasible, and urged the others to use their blades in order to ration their ammunition.
          But they had wasted plenty of ammo when they ran into herds of Biter that formed walls, blocking the Interstate. When there was just too many of them, they couldn’t take chances with knives or machetes.
          They had used all the ammo for the five automatic pistols in their possession. The AK-47s they had acquired were long gone. And so were the three hunting rifles they had taken from Malcolm McCredie’s men.
          All the group had left was Carson’s shotgun and his backup Smith & Wesson. Damien’s dual .38 pistols. Kenny’s semi-automatic handgun. Tyler’s submachine gun. The .27 Beretta that Eli Burton had claimed. And two revolvers. One that was taken by Valentina Jackson, and one that Taryn Mills had secured as her own.
          Nikki was the only one left without a weapon, besides the scalpel she had been hording since her days as a nurse. So Carson parted with the Smith & Wesson, and gave her lessons on how to use it. Though at that point in her life, Nikki was well aware how to operate a firearm.
          Carson had consulted the map and they were so close to Arkansas, so close to finding his family, that he could actually see them every time he shut his eyes. Which, I might add, wasn’t very often.
          None of the group had slept well since the mysterious death of Vern Sheldon. Someone had slashed Vern’s throat, severed his jugular, and left him out in the woods to turn.
          Whoever it was, they had taken Vern’s .357 Magnum along with them.
          Damien Albright was a light sleeper as it was. Now, he wasn’t getting any sleep at all.
          Neither was Kenny Sudrow. He couldn’t rest knowing that there was a killer amongst them.
          Kenny, Damien, and Carson stuck close together, watched each other’s backs. They all had their own suspects they were keeping a watchful eye over.
          Carson suspected that Valentina Jackson was hiding something. Something other than the switchblade she had recently revealed, only at Carson’s request.
          Damien didn’t know Diego Garcia from a hole in the wall and since he was one of the latest additions to the group, he fell under scrutiny in Damien’s eyes.
          Kenny’s prime suspect was Eli Burton. There was something about him that just rubbed Kenny the wrong way. He knew Eli had secrets, but squeezing the truth out of him proved to be a difficult task.
          Anytime Kenny tried to engage him in conversation, he remained laconic. He spoke in short sentences and gave vague, ambiguous answers. He didn’t seem to like talking about his family, and his sister was a subject that was off limits. He never addressed his past, his childhood, his teenage years.
          All Kenny really knew about Eli was that he kept to himself, his parents were loaded and they left him and his sister a large inheritance when they passed on, and he sported an odd tattoo on his shoulder. It was a tattoo of the planet Earth with a skull and crossbones painted over it.
          Kenny had seen the design before, but his memory couldn’t recall where it was from or what the tattoo represented, if it represented anything at all.
          Only Chase Crawford knew the truth about Eli Burton’s tattoo. Only Chase had heard of the Black Lodgers before. And Chase was gone, dead and buried beside the grave of Janice Whitfield.
          The group had lost so many members, it was hard to keep track sometimes. But the loss of Vern Sheldon seemed to affect Carson even more than it did the others. Carson had great respect for the man and was sorry to see him go.
          But Vern left one thing behind that was going to become their secret weapon in the war against the undead. His flamethrower.
* * *
          As dusk settled in and they pulled the RV to the side of the Interstate to refuel, Carson decided this would be the best spot for them to rest for the evening. Kenny, Tyler, and Diego gathered their belongings, tents, and flashlights and set out to find a good spot to camp out for the night.
          Carson and Damien flipped a coin to see who’d stand guard first. Damien called tails and got the better of that exchange. Carson loaded his Remington shotgun and noticed he was running low on shells.
          He stepped outside the RV, closing the door behind him, and pumping the mechanism of his shotgun.
          It was nights like these that Carson loathed. The loneliness, the anxiety, the fear. You just have to stand there and try to keep watch in every direction by yourself and hope the shit doesn’t hit the fan.
          Nobody to talk to. Nobody to keep him company. This was what he feared the most. Complete isolation.
          He knew the majority of the group was in earshot inside the RV, but he wasn’t going to deprive them of the rest they desperately needed. He just had to wait it out until three A.M. when Damien would rise to switch places with him.
          Carson used this time to piece his shattered memories together. He knew he was in the marines at one point in his life. He knew he was once a cop, too. He knew his wife’s name was Caroline and he had a young daughter named Charlotte.
He remembered little things from the past: Movie titles, names of celebrities, random song lyrics. And his vocabulary remained intact. He still remembered how to drive a car and fire a gun. His instincts to survive certainly hadn’t abandoned him. He just couldn’t recall much else.
          He wondered if Caroline would remember him when she saw him again. He wondered if he could remember how to be a father again. Only time would tell.
* * *
          Diego Garcia was hearing the whispers again. Those rotten pangs in his gut had returned. The sickness was coursing through his veins. The only cure was fresh blood. He needed a victim. Any victim would do.
          He couldn’t kill Tyler or Kenny. That would be too obvious. The group was already suspicious enough as it was.
          Eli Burton had kept his mouth shut about the little chat he had with Diego. He hadn’t uttered a word about Diego’s hand in Vern Sheldon’s death. And Diego was grateful. So Eli would be spared this time.
          That left Carson, Damien, Taryn, Valentina, and Nikki to choose from. Diego identified Carson as the leader. Everyone in the group seemed to look up to him, to follow his command and never question his judgment. If he really wanted to turn this group upside down, he would have to take out the leader of the pack.
          And so it was decided. Diego would kill Carson Ryder.
* * *
     “I can’t sleep,” Valentina told Carson as she stepped out from the RV.
     “Fine,” Carson sighed. “You can hang with me. Just don’t distract me.”
     “I’m sorry I told you your wife was in Arkansas,” she said. “I was positive at the time that she said Arkansas. In hindsight, I could be wrong. But I could also be right. Are you still going to be mad at me if I’m right?”
     “We’ll see,” Carson said, cracking a smirk.
     “There we go,” Valentina said. “I knew you couldn’t stay mad at me forever.”
     “Let’s talk about something else,” he said. “Let’s talk about your father. If you don’t mind me asking, what was he like?”
     “He was a real jerk,” she said. “Anyone who would use his own daughter as live bait is scum in my book. He deserved everything he got. In fact, he deserved a whole lot more.”
     “Sorry I asked,” he said.
     “No, it’s good for me to get it out. I have so many emotions buried deep inside me. I need to find a way to let go. He was a horrible man, but he’s gone. Dead. And I couldn’t be happier. Thanks again.”
     “Don’t mention it,” Carson said, glancing around for impending danger. It was a quiet night. Not a single Biter was roaming the Interstate.
     From the darkness, he saw light and Diego wandered up with his flashlight in hand. “Couldn’t sleep,” Diego said.
     “That seems to be the trend,” Valentina said.
     “I hope I’m not interrupting anything,” Diego said.
     “Not at all,” Carson assured him.
     Diego had removed the straight razor from his boot and tucked it into the front of his waistband. He also had Vern’s .357 Magnum tucked into the back of his pants, but he was hoping he wouldn’t have to use it.
     He just needed to lure Carson and Valentina away from the RV. Then he could appease the sickness that boiled inside of him.
     “Do you guys smoke?” Diego asked.
     “Cigarettes?” Carson asked with a glint of hope in his eyes. He’d been craving a cigarette since he finished his last pack.
     “I was talking about weed,” Diego said. “I happen to have some back at my tent.”
     “No thanks,” Carson said. “I have vague recollections of smoking that shit in high school and I don’t think I liked it too much. Besides, I was a cop, you know.”
     “Sorry, didn’t know that,” Diego said. “What about you?”
     “I haven’t smoked in years,” Valentina said. “But I could go for some if Officer Friendly here doesn’t mind.”
     “Be my guest,” Carson said.
     “Great,” Valentina said. “So just go back to your tent and get it and then come back here and we’ll smoke.”
     “You sure you don’t want to come with me and smoke back at my tent?”
     “I’m fine here,” Valentina said.
     “Ok…it’s just…gosh, I’m embarrassed to say this, but I’m kind of afraid to walk back alone. You can never be too careful. I’d feel better if someone came with me.”
     “We’ll all go,” Carson said. “The three of us. Let me just tell Damien.”
     “No!” Diego exclaimed. “Don’t wake him up. It’s a short walk. We’ll be back before you know it.”
     “You’re right,” Carson said. “No sense in waking that grumpy bastard up. He’ll probably be pissed if I do. Alright, lead the way.”
* * *
          Just like with Vern, Diego led them around in a semi-circle, as far away from the RV and the tents as he possibly could. The farther he led them from the Interstate, the more suspicious Carson became.
          “You sure we’re going the right way?” Carson asked.
          “Positive,” Diego said, grinning from ear to ear.
          He stopped suddenly and spun around, the straight razor in one hand, .357 Magnum in the other. “On the ground, now.”
          “What the fuck is this?” Valentina demanded to know.
          “On your bellies, now, or I’ll blow your brains out.”
          Carson tossed the Remington aside and dropped to his knees. He lay on his stomach and Valentina dropped her revolver and followed suit.
          “You son of a bitch,” Carson muttered. “You killed Vern, didn’t you?”
          “I had to,” Diego said. “It’s the only way to cure the sickness.”
          “Yeah, you’re sick alright,” Valentina mumbled.
          Diego kneeled down beside Valentina and reached his hand under her shirt, caressing her back with the hand that clutched Vern’s .357 while holding the razor to her throat with the other hand. She refused to look him in the eye as he stared intently at her.
          Carson reached into his boot and slid his pocket knife out. The blade was three inches long, but it could get the job done if used right. He flipped it open and sprung to his feet, swinging the blade and grazing Diego’s cheek.
          Diego winced as he dropped the razor and pulled the .357 out from under Valentina’s shirt. He raised the gun, but Carson took another swing and grazed his other cheek.
          Diego had blood running down both cheeks, and under the glistening glow of the moonlight, he resembled a Native American with his face painted for war to Valentina. He raised the gun again, But Carson kicked it from his hand and stabbed with the blade.
          He missed and stabbed tree bark instead. Diego scrambled around in search for the gun and found it atop a pile of dry leaves. He fired three shots and took off running.
          Each shot missed, but it gave him the head start he needed. Valentina and Carson searched for their guns and found them with their flashlights. Now it was only a matter of making it back to the RV before Diego could plan his next move.
          They searched the area first and found the three tents. Diego’s tent had been abandoned, but Tyler and Kenny were still there. Carson woke them up and made them aware of the situation at hand.
          The four of them rushed back to the RV and alerted the others.
          “I knew it,” Damien said. “I told you I didn’t trust that guy.”
          “It doesn’t matter who was right,” Carson pointed out. “All that matters is that we stop him. We need to find him as soon as possible. I suggest we fan out, comb the entire area. He can’t go too far, not on foot. Not without supplies.
          Eli, you take your Beretta and stand guard. Nikki, stay behind with Eli and if you see Diego, don’t be afraid to put that Smith & Wesson to good use.
          Valentina and I will take one half of the Interstate. Damien, you and Taryn take the other half. Kenny and Tyler, you guys comb the surrounding area. Let’s go get this bastard. For Vern.”
          “For Vern,” the group repeated in chorus.
          They split up, and Tyler wandered off with Kenny, wondering how Eli got to be so lucky by getting paired up with Nikki.
          With the rest of the group off searching for Diego, Eli knew this was the perfect opportunity for mischief and mayhem. If he stepped out of line, there was nothing Nikki could do to stop him.
          But Eli wasn’t like Diego. He had total control of his sickness. And he knew if Nikki turned up dead, it would bring about too many unwanted questions.
          Though he supposed he could just kill her and pin it on Diego. But he had pinned his crime on one member of the group in the past and he didn’t want to push his luck.
          Instead, he did what Carson asked him to do. He played the good little solider and stood guard with Nikki outside of the RV.
          Eli also knew that Diego couldn’t resist the temptation to return to the RV, to finish the job he had started.
          And as he watched Diego run towards the RV, .357 Magnum in hand, he pondered what to do in this situation.
          “I’m willing to give you a pass,” Diego said. “Step aside and let me kill the girl.”
          “I’m afraid I can’t do that,” Eli said as Nikki cowered behind him. “Now beat it before I put you down.”
          “I’ve got you in my sight,” Diego said. “I can blow your ear off from this distance. Or I can just put one round between your eyes and then I’ll be free to do whatever I want to sweet little Nikki.”
          “You must be one hell of a shot,” Eli said. “But so am I. And I never miss. So why don’t you drop your gun and surrender while you still have a chance?”
          “Not happening,” Diego said.
          “Then let’s do this,” Eli said.
          “Let’s,” Damien said, jumping out from behind the RV, Vern’s flamethrower strapped to his back.
          He raised the barrel and squeezed the trigger. A long, steady stream of fire projected from the barrel, igniting Diego Garcia’s clothes. The fire singed his hair and spread over his body, engulfing him.
          He tried rolling across the Interstate, but the fire was too strong and Diego’s attempts to extinguish the blaze only seemed to fan the flames. His skin blistered, cracked, and bubbled as the fire seared his flesh to the bone.
          The screams that Diego made curdled their blood and made Nikki cup her hands over her ears. When it was over, Damien fired three shots into him. “Just to be safe,” Damien said.
          “You certainly are a man of your word,” Carson said, recalling when Damien promised that if they found Vern’s killer, he’d burn them alive.
          The smoke that curled up to the sky smelled worse than anything they could describe. You can’t accurately explain the stench of a burnt corpse. It’s not something you really can imagine.
          Burning hair, you might be familiar with that smell. Burning flesh, if you’ve been in a fire, maybe you know what it’s like. But boiled blood, nobody knows what that actually smells like until they’ve had a whiff of it.
          The sight turned Nikki’s stomach and she had to avert her eyes and hang her shirt over her nose to stifle the smell. “It’s ok,” Taryn assured, feeling a bit queasy herself. “It’s all over.”
          “No, it’s not,” Damien muttered. “There’s a herd coming our way. Must’ve heard the gunshots. I’m such a dumbass. Well, this is where Vern’s flamethrower gets put to the test.”
          He squeezed the trigger, but no flames sprouted from the barrel. The pilot light had blown out. “Fuck,” he said bluntly.
          “Can you get it lit again?” Carson asked.
          “I can, but it’s a bitch. And it’ll take time.”
          “Time we don’t have,” Kenny said.
          Carson kissed the crucifix around his neck and said a silent prayer. He was waiting for a miracle that wasn’t going to come.
          Tyler opened fire with his submachine gun and took down a row of Biters. But another row stood behind it, just as hungry as the first. If Nikki thought the body of Diego smelled bad, what until she got a whiff of these guys. Most of them barely even had flesh clinging to their fragile skulls.
          These were “oldies”, as Kenny referred to them. Humans that got turned during the first week that the virus spread. The advanced rot and decay made them look as if they had been dead for years, and some of them might have been for all Kenny knew.
          “I’ve got an idea,” Carson said. “Everyone pile in the RV.”
          They all climbed aboard and Carson started it up. He revved the engine and punched the gas. He mowed down row after row of shambling Biters. Severed limbs flew through the air, blood and guts splashed up in waves across the windshield.
          Carson turned the wipers on and kept on driving. When he looked in the side-view mirror and saw some of them were still twitching and writhing around in the road, he backed up the RV and ran them over again.
          Carson could feel their skulls squashing like rotted pumpkins under the weight of the tires. When the road was clear and Carson had taken out all his aggression on that army of the undead, they moved forward.
          Sleep was out of the question. The others could rest if they wanted. But Carson wasn’t going to stop moving until they reached Arkansas.

To Be Continued With Part Twenty-One: ARRIVAL

Wednesday, November 26, 2014

IN THE FLESH: PART NINETEEN

Genre: Horror (Zombies)


ROLL CALL


Carson Ryder: Former marine/Former police officer/Suffers from retrograde amnesia/ Searching for clues to his past
Damien Albright: Found and saved Carson/Was married once/Bad tempered/Doesn’t seem to care at all about family or traditional values
Kenny Sudrow: Youngest member of the group/Former spa porter/Happy to be doing something else/Lost his family to Biters
Eli Burton: Survivor found in Cherrywood Mall/Parents were rich and left him a large inheritance when they died
Vern Sheldon: Used to drive a truck/Lost his family/Carries a bad-ass flamethrower
Valentina Jackson: Tough as nails/Has no fear/Knows how to use a gun
Tyler Reese: A young man who saved Kenny Sudrow’s life/Carries a submachine gun/A native Bostonian/He used to be a mechanic
Taryn Mills: One of the newest members of the group/Little is known about her at this time
Diego Garcia: A ticking time bomb
Nikki Fox: A native of Tennessee/Former registered nurse

 
IN THE FLESH
By Daniel Skye
 

PART NINETEEN
KILLER AMONGST US

 
Day Two Hundred and Eight.
It had been more than a week since the group had abandoned the Starlight Hotel and the journey to Arkansas had begun. They traveled the Interstate, despite the risk of encountering Biters. And they had encountered more than their share in the days that had passed. But every time their backs were against the wall, they managed to come out of it unscathed.
          The Interstate was cluttered with abandoned vehicles that once belonged to those who fell victim to the hands of the undead. It forced them to travel at a snail’s pace as they had to stop the RV every few minutes to push cars and trucks off to the side of the Interstate.
          At the rate they were going, Carson Ryder figured it would take a months’ time just to reach the border.
          Diego Garcia had been biding his time, waiting for the perfect opportunity to strike. But the sickness burned his insides, making it feel as if his internal organs had been set ablaze. The pangs in his gut that wouldn’t relent, the voices in his head that he couldn’t silence. It was all too much for Diego to bear.
          It was the sickness that forced him to move plans ahead of schedule.
          The RV had become cramped to such a degree that Tyler Reese, Kenny Sudrow, and Diego had opted to sleep in separate tents that were pitched just a stone’s throw away from the Interstate. It freed up some space in the RV and guaranteed that everybody could get a decent night’s sleep. Someone still had to keep watch, but they worked in shifts so everyone could do their share and also get a bit of rest.
          Vern Sheldon was the first to take watch that evening. And this was just the opportunity that Diego was relying on.
There was a longue chair set up for him outside the RV if his legs got tired, but Vern always preferred to stand while he was kept watch. It helped him stay vigilant.
          And so Vern stood with his .357 Magnum, waiting for any trouble that lurked in the surrounding darkness. His vigilance paid dividends as he heard the footsteps and raised his .357 Magnum, but lowered it as he saw Diego Garcia walk out from the shadows.
          The straight razor was polished and sharpened, ready to hack, slash, and sever any arteries Diego could find under the moonlight. If all else failed, he had a simple backup plan: Go for the throat. Sever the jugular with one quick stroke of the razor let him bleed out in a few short minutes.
          But he couldn’t do it there. Not with Carson, Damien, and the others all within earshot. He needed to lure Vern away from the RV.
          “What are you doing roaming around in the dark?” Vern asked. “I thought you were one of those things. I could’ve shot you.”
          “Lucky for me, you didn’t,” Diego said. “I can’t sleep. I figured I’d come keep you company.”
          “The watch does go faster when you have someone to talk to,” Vern shrugged. “Why the hell not?”
          “So tell me about yourself,” Diego said as he leaned up against the side of the RV. Kenny had used a can of red spray paint he’d been carrying in his knapsack to scrawl across the side. In all capital letters, he’d written: THE DEAD FEAR THE LIVING
          “Not much to tell,” Vern said. “I had a family once, but I lost them. My wife was the first to go. Those Night of the Living Dead wannabes took a chunk out of her forearm. I waited for her to turn before I put her down.”
          “Let’s talk about something a little more cheerful,” Diego suggested. “What’d you do for a living?”
          “I used to drive a truck. I had a CDL and used to drive trucks for Coca Cola, Walmart, CVS, 7-11. But the money was never enough. So I used to sell pot on the side to make ends meet.” A light popped on in Diego’s head. This was the opening he’d been waiting for to lure Vern away.
          “Did you used to smoke?” Diego asked.
          “On occasion,” Vern confessed. “It relaxed me, eased my tension. I sure could use some of that shit right about now.”
          “I have some,” Diego said. “Back at my tent. I’ve been hording it for a while now, saving it for a special occasion. What do you say?”
          “Man, I can’t leave my post,” Vern said, itching the back of his head.
          “You sure? We’ll only be gone a few minutes. It’s better if nobody else knows about it. They might want in.”
          “Ok, you twisted my leg,” Vern said. “Let’s go. Lead the way.”
* * *
          Diego took Vern around in a semi-circle, leading him as far from the RV and the tents as he could without arousing Vern’s suspicion. He couldn’t have anyone hearing the potential screams or sounds of a likely struggle.
          Vern was a big man, six foot three, pushing three hundred pounds. He wasn’t exactly a gym rat in his previous life, but he did have muscle underneath that thick exterior.
          And he still had the .357 Magnum, something Diego knew he wouldn’t be able to persuade him to leave behind. He knew the gun would stay by his side at all times. It was a dangerous new world they lived in, but Diego wasn’t afraid. At that very moment, he knew the Biters didn’t pose the biggest threat to him or Vern. It was Diego himself that Vern had to be afraid of.
          “Where’s your tent?” Vern asked as Diego slowed down to let him walk ahead a bit. He slipped the straight razor from his boot and opened it up. Vern turned just as Diego slashed with the blade, nicking his cheek.
          Blood oozed from the open wound that Vern had no time to address. This was a battle that meant life or death. Vern raised his gun, but Diego slashed again, this time slicing down his forearm and barely missing a main artery.
          Vern winced in pain and dropped his weapon. And he didn’t have time to search around in the dark for it. His only chance for survival was to wrestle that straight razor out of Diego’s hands.
          He came charging like a bull, but Diego was faster and the razor sliced across Vern’s throat with one lightning fast motion. Blood spurted forth in quick jets as Vern collapsed to his knees, gargling out his last words. Words that Diego couldn’t quite decipher. But it was all meaningless. Even if Diego could comprehend what Vern was saying, he’d never be able to share his last words with the group.
          Diego waited until Vern was gone. Then he crept back to his tent, wiping the blood from the razor and concealing it in his boot once again. He unzipped the tent, crawled back inside like a slug on his belly, and sealed the tent back up.
          The voices in his head had quieted. The pangs in his gut had been alleviated. But for how long? How long would the sickness let Diego rest?
* * *
          Damien Albright was a light sleeper. So when it was three A.M. and it came time to switch with Vern and stand guard, he got up and stepped out of the RV, only to find Vern had abandoned his post.
          “Vern,” Damien said as low as a whisper, so as not to disturb the others. “You off taking a piss somewhere?”
          When Damien’s call went disregarded, he said a little louder, “Vern, are you out there?” Still, this attempt to summon Vern had failed.
          Not quite sure what he was up against, Damien drew his .38 pistols from their respective holsters and waited for Sheldon’s return. He counted down the seconds of each passing minute silently in his head. When twenty minutes had passed and Vern had yet to return to his post, Damien had no choice but to summon the others.
          Carson was the first to awake from Damien’s rough nudging. “What is it?” Carson muttered, half asleep.
          “We’ve got a problem,” Damien said, as the others began to stir from their sleep. “Vern’s gone missing. I woke up at three to switch places with him and when I went outside, he was gone. I thought maybe he was taking a leak or something, so I waited. Called his name a few times. He never came back.”
          “Do you think he’s alright?” Nikki Fox asked.
          “I can’t say for sure. His bag is still here. His flamethrower is still in the passenger seat of the RV. He didn’t leave his gun behind. I didn’t see any blood on the road, no signs of a struggle. But it isn’t like him just to wander off.”
          Carson sat up and mashed his knuckles into his eyes and rubbed away all the sleep crust that had formed there. He brushed the blanket off of him and picked himself up off the floor of the RV. “Taryn, do you know how to use a gun?”
          “Are you kidding me? I group up on a survivalist compound. Guns, knives, crossbows, you name it and I know how to use it.”
          “Good. Damien, you go with Taryn and Valentina. Check on Tyler, Kenny, and Diego and make sure no one else is missing. Bring them back here and get ready for anything. Eli, you’ll come with me.”
          “Where?” Eli asked.
          “To look for Vern.”
* * *
          They took their guns and flashlights and went their separate ways. Their flashlights beamed over snapped branches, fallen leaves, and rocks that jutted from the earth. It was less than a quarter mile from the RV where Carson noticed the trail of blood that had poured over the rocks and dry leaf piles. He followed the trail with his flashlight and thirty feet ahead was where they found Vern’s body.
          His throat had been slashed by a sharp, unidentified object. The killer didn’t leave the murder weapon behind.
          “Oh, Vern,” Carson sighed as he kneeled beside his fallen friend. “I’m so sorry. So sorry…”
          Vern’s eyelids fluttered and he sat up. His pupils were gone. His irises had taken over, giving his eyes the gleam of death. It sounded like he was trying to speak, but no words escaped his throat that had been slashed to ribbons. Only terrifying growls and hideous snarling sounds.
          It stumbled to its feet. It had Vern’s face, Vern’s body, but Carson knew this wasn’t his friend. Not anymore. The color had been drained from his skin and the first signs of decomposition had started to set in.
          Carson inched back with Eli following behind him, pumping his Remington shotgun. “Vern, if you can hear me in there, please stay back. I don’t want to be the one who has to put you down.”
          Vern staggered forward, his legs wobbly, his body struggling to regain some sense of coordination. It walked in zigzag-like patterns as it tried to pursue its newly established source of nourishment.
          Its lifeless eyes were focused in on Carson, and the more that Carson inched back, the more that Vern inched forward.
          “Vern, please stay back,” Carson pleaded, his index finger tightening around the trigger. “I don’t want to shoot you.”
          Eli raised the .27 Beretta he’d taken from the stash of guns and urged Carson to duck. Carson dropped to the ground and Eli fired one deafening shot. The slug pierced Vern between the eyes and it was over in seconds.
          “I know you didn’t want to do it,” Eli said. “So I saved you the trouble.”
          “Thanks,” Carson sighed. “He was a great man. I’m sorry to see him go.”
          “Me too,” Eli said. “But we’ve got bigger problems than this. Somebody cut Vern’s throat. Either we’re being watched and hunted, or one of the group did this to him.”
          “You’re right,” Carson said. “Come on. Let’s get going. We’ll talk about this more back at the RV. I don’t even want to think of one of our own perpetrating an act like this. But in today’s world, you can never be too sure.”
How True, Eli thought. How true.
* * *
          The group was waiting for Carson and Eli back at the RV. Damien had taken the women and rounded up Diego, Tyler, and Kenny. They all stood beside the RV, guns in hand. They saw the men approaching with their flashlights and lowered their weapons as Carson stepped forward.
          “He’s dead,” Carson informed the group. “Someone slit his throat. He…he came back. Eli did the right thing. He shot Vern. Spared him from a life of death.”
          “Who…?” Nikki gasped and trailed off. “Who could kill such a sweet, innocent man?”
          “I don’t know,” Carson said. “But somebody did it. And until we find out who, I’m afraid to say that everyone here is a suspect. Everybody, take out your blades. If anyone has a knife, we need to see it.”
          Carson fetched his machete, the hunting knife Damien had parted with, and the pocket knife he kept stashed in his boot for backup and laid them all out in the road. Damien removed his second hunting knife from its sheath and laid it on the ground beside Carson’s blades.
          Taryn didn’t have any weapons aside from the automatic pistol the group had lent her. Valentina did however. She removed a switchblade from her pocket and placed it on the ground.
          “Since when do you have that?” Carson asked her. “I’ve never seen it before.”
          “Well, I’ve never had to use it before,” Valentina explained. “Not with all the guns and ammunition we have. But I’ve had this thing forever. It belonged to my father. He gave it to me on my thirteenth birthday.”
          “That’s one hell of a birthday present,” Tyler chuckled.
          “You got something you want to say?” Valentina asked Tyler. “Just say it.”
          “Hey, I didn’t mean anything by it,” Tyler said. “I was just trying to give the situation a little levity. Sorry for trying to stay positive.”
          “No, I’m sorry,” Valentina muttered. “We’re all very tense right now. I didn’t mean to go off like that.”
          “It’s quite alright,” Tyler assured her.
          “Does anyone else have a knife?” Carson asked.
          “I’ve got a butterfly knife that Trevor Virden gave me before he died,” Kenny said. “But the blade is dull as shit. You couldn’t cut through the stick of warm butter with it.”
          “Let’s see it,” Carson insisted, not taking any chances. Kenny fetched his knapsack and took out the knife, flipping it open. Carson inspected the blade and saw Kenny wasn’t joking. The blade was dull and weak. There was no way you could slit a man’s throat with it.
          He passed the knife back to Kenny and Tyler stepped forward. In his hand, a serrated pocket knife with a blade no longer than the palm of his hand.
          “The submachine gun isn’t enough?” Damien chortled.
          “It’s always good to have a backup weapon, Tyler said in his defense.
          “I can’t argue with that,” Damien said.
          “Anyone else?” Carson said, looking at Diego and Eli. They put their hands out and gestured as if to say “we have nothing.” He glanced over at Nikki, who was trembling slightly.
          “Nikki?” Carson said. “What is it?”
          “I don’t want you to think I did anything bad, so I’ll just show you,” Nikki said. She got her bag from the RV and removed a thick cloth. She unfolded it and in the center, a sharp scalpel.
          “Where’d you get this?” Carson asked her.
          “I told you I was a registered nurse,” Nikki explained. “I took this from the hospital the day the virus started to spread. I needed something to defend myself and I didn’t know how to use a gun at the time. I’ve been holding onto it ever since.”
          “So that’s it?” Carson asked. “No one else is holding out?” He took one last look around. The faces all looked guilty to him. He had been through so much these past few months that he couldn’t tell the innocent apart from the malevolent anymore.
          “I don’t expect anyone to confess,” Carson said. “But unless someone comes forward or we find out who did this, you’re all suspects in my book.”
          “What about you?” Kenny asked. “Diego, Tyler, and I were in our tents when this happened. Where were you?”
          “I was in the RV sleeping with everyone else,” Carson said. “And don’t you accuse me of anything. I didn’t kill Vern. I respected that man. He saved our asses on numerous occasions. He was one of the few people we could depend upon.”
          “So who did it?” Kenny pushed him for answers. “Who killed Vern? And why’d they do it?”
          “I don’t know,” Carson said with exasperation. “But I’m going to find out.”
* * *
Day Two Hundred and Nine.
          That morning, while the others waited safely inside the RV, Carson led Damien and Kenny back to where he and Eli had found Vern’s body. They’d brought shovels along with them to give their friend a proper burial.
          Damien and Kenny were the only two members of the group Carson trusted at this point, but even they fell under suspicion in his eyes. Carson knew that Kenny had taken a bottle of Southern Comfort back to his tent with him. If he was drinking all night, Carson doubted he was in any shape to kill anyone that night. Still, he couldn’t be too sure.
          And Damien was Damien. His icy demeanor and heartless attitude made him a prime suspect in any crime under logical circumstances. But Carson knew this man. This was the man who saved his life. He had traveled with this man for the better part of a year and he trusted Damien with his life. But he needed to be sure who he was dealing with.
          “You know,” Carson said as they dug a grave for their fallen comrade. “You were the first one who woke up last night. You were the first one who noticed Vern was missing.”
          “What are you implying?” Damien asked.
          “I’m not implying anything,” Carson said. “It’s just…strange. Why’d you wait so long to tell everyone?”
          “I’m a light sleeper,” Damien said. “You know that. I woke up at three to switch places with Vern, but he wasn’t there. I thought he strolled off to take a piss or something, so I waited. When he didn’t come back, that’s when I woke everyone up. That’s it. I didn’t kill Vern.”
          “I never said you did,” Carson said.
          “Yeah, but you implied it.”
          “Guys, let’s be cool,” Kenny suggested. “Vern wouldn’t want this.”
          “How the hell do you know what Vern would want?” Damien snapped.
          “Calm down,” Carson said, placing his hand on Damien’s shoulder. “I’m sorry if I offended you. I just can’t believe someone would do this to Vern. I can’t believe he’s gone.”
          “Well, believe it,” Damien said. “Now let’s get this poor guy in the ground and get back on the road. The three of us need to stick together if we’re going to find out who did this. We need to watch each other’s backs.”
          “If you hear anything,” Carson said, “Anything at all, you let me know.”
          “If I hear anything, you’ll be the first to know,” Damien assured him. Then he assured him of something else. “And when we find out who did this, I’m going to torch the son of a bitch with Vern’s flamethrower. You can bet on that.”

To Be Continued With Part Twenty: BURNING MAN