The Purge of Babylon Series Box Set, Vol. 2 | Books 4-6 Page 2
“Because I’m half-Korean that means I can’t be the Lone Ranger?” Keo said.
“I was thinking more because you’re a smartass troublemaker.”
Keo grinned. “I hate horses, anyway.”
The young man sitting next to Zachary, Shorty, remained fixed outside the window with his binoculars. “Man, you really stirred them up. They’re running around like chickens with their heads cut off. You better hope they didn’t hear that gunshot.”
“Did you hear it?” Keo asked.
“No.”
“Then I’m guessing they couldn’t hear it, either.”
“You hope,” Shorty said. “You know what I say about hoping these days?”
“What’s that?”
“Nothing.”
“I don’t get it.”
“Because there is no hope. Get it?”
Keo smirked. “You suck at this.”
“Whatever,” Shorty said. He lowered his binoculars and glanced at Zachary. “We locked the lobby doors, right?”
“Yup,” Zachary nodded. “Why?”
“Nothing, just wanted to make sure,” he said, and Keo thought the young man might have shivered slightly in the semidarkness, but that could have just been his imagination.
Keo crouched next to them at the window. He looked out at the shadows gliding up the street in their direction. After all these months, he still couldn’t quite get used to watching them moving around at night. This was their world now. There was no mistaking that. They—he, Zachary, and Shorty, and all the other humans still running around out there—were the outliers. The exception to the rule.
Santa Marie Island. That’s where you should be. With Gillian. On the beach.
Soon. Soon…
He could see the dead ghoul he had shot, farther down the sidewalk and left to lay where it had fallen. He had done that. Killed it. With a silver bullet. The reality of it was still a little hard to grasp.
But there it was. The evidence.
Daebak.
It had taken them days to collect enough of the valuable metal and find an Archers store in the city with the right bullet-making supplies. Despite Zachary’s and Shorty’s doubts (which he shared, if he was being honest), they all wanted to believe. The creatures had been unkillable except by sunlight for so long that just knowing you could take them out even at night was a game changer.
“You can kill them with silver,” the recording had said. “Stab them, shoot them, or cut them with any silver weapon, and they will die.”
Damn straight.
“Silver bullets,” Keo said. “If she’s right about that, what else do you think she knows?”
“The bodies of water and sunlight we already know,” Zachary said. “I don’t know where we’d get industrial strength ultraviolet lights, though.”
“I knew a couple of guys that grew some plants using those,” Shorty said. “I don’t know if they were industrial strength, but they looked pretty big to me.”
“I know one thing. We’re making a lot of silver bullets tomorrow.”
Shorty glanced at Keo. “Nice shot, by the way. I didn’t think you could hit a trash dumpster with that German peashooter.”
“You’d be surprised what a peashooter can do in the right hands,” Keo said.
“I bet. You ever gonna tell us what you used to do before all of this?”
“This and that, and some of those.” Keo leaned back against the wall and pulled a half-eaten granola bar from his pack and took a bite. “Next stop, Song Island?”
“After we make a shitload of silver bullets,” Zachary said. “As much as we can carry.”
“What about knives?”
“Silver knives?”
“Yeah.”
Zachary nodded. “Good idea. Give me a day, and I can come up with a lot more silver-based weapons.”
“Take your time,” Keo said. “It’s not like we’re going anywhere tonight—” He stopped in mid-sentence.
Zachary glanced over. “What?”
Keo looked across the empty floor at the stairwell door. He was still chewing, but there was no taste anymore. “Are you sure the lobby’s sealed?”
“Like I told Shorty, yeah. Why?”
“I thought I heard something.”
“Like what?” Shorty asked.
“Moving.”
“What kind of moving?” Zachary said.
“Moving.”
“That narrows it down,” Shorty said just before he picked up his rifle and laid it across his lap.
Zachary pulled away from the window and faced the stairwell door. He stopped moving—even stopped breathing entirely—and listened. After a moment, he shook his head, eyes searching out Keo’s again. “I don’t hear anything. You sure you heard something?”
“Pretty sure,” Keo nodded.
“Shorty?”
Shorty shook his head. “Maybe all those months being chased through the woods by that Pollard guy’s got him spooked.”
“You didn’t hear anything?”
“Nope.”
Zachary looked back at Keo. “What do you think it was?”
“I told you. Movement.”
“From the floor below us? You mentioned the lobby…”
“Somewhere below us.” Keo dropped the unfinished granola bar and tightened his hands around the MP5SD. “Definitely below us.”
“Maybe you’re just imagining things,” Shorty said. “Maybe killing that bloodsucker’s got you overly excited.”
“I don’t get overly excited.”
“First time for everything, San Diego,” Shorty said.
Keo flashed him a slightly annoyed look. He didn’t really like Shorty all that much, and he was sure the feeling was mutual. Keo preferred the older Zachary’s company. Shorty was a couple of years younger, and his insistence on calling Keo San Diego was getting old real fast. The only reason the kid had come along with them in the first place was because he was tied to the hip with Zachary, who had his own reasons for wanting to reach Song Island.
“Are you guys loaded with silver?” Keo whispered.
“We just made the nine mil rounds for your peashooter, remember?” Shorty said.
Zachary’s eyes remained focused on the door across from them. If he heard or saw anything, he didn’t say it. After a while, he looked down at Keo, sitting to his right—Shorty was to his left—and said, “Are you sure—”
He never finished because Zachary’s words became slurred, then stopped becoming words entirely, and instead took on the form of a scream as his body jerked backward toward the window, as if he were being sucked out by a vacuum.
Keo lunged away from the wall and unslung the MP5SD as he watched, with a mixture of horror and disbelief, as two of the creatures clung to the windowsill outside the building and pulled Zachary through the opening.
One of them had a fistful of Zachary’s scruffy long hair while the other had a viselike grip over the lower half of his jaw, quickly clamping down on Zachary’s screams and turning them into muffled cries for help instead.
And all Keo could think was, How did they get up here? Did they…crawl up the side of the building?
He didn’t know they could do that. He didn’t know the ghouls could do a lot of things.
“Zachary, fuck!” Shorty screamed as he too stumbled away from the wall, spinning around and lifting his rifle.
Shorty fired, his first shot splattering the left eyeball of one of the ghouls outside, the round punching through the back of its head and disappearing into the cold October air, continuing on. The creature, too, kept on going—pulling Zachary’s struggling body through the window along with its partner.
Then Zachary disappeared from view.
Keo stood, frozen, even as he heard Zachary screaming like a banshee from outside. The screaming went on for what must have been two or three seconds, though it sounded more like two to three minutes.
Jesus Christ, how long does it take a man to fall down five floor
s?
Both he and Shorty flinched involuntarily when they heard the thump! of flesh and bones striking the sidewalk outside.
“Shorty,” Keo said. “We gotta go.”
“Zachary,” Shorty said.
If he had more to say, he never finished it. Instead, he might have gasped audibly when two of the creatures—different ones, this time (or were they?)—reached up from below the windowsill, grabbed the frames, and pulled themselves upward until their faces were visible in the opening. Grotesquely deformed features, like nothing that could possibly be mistaken for human, peered through the window at them.
“We gotta go!” Keo shouted.
Keo backpedaled from the glaring eyes, lifted the submachine, and fired. He hit one of them in the face and the creature let go of its grip, dropping back into the night. Keo was momentarily shocked by what had just happened. He had shot these things more times than he could count and they never reacted that way. He had even seen Shorty put a .308 round through one of them a few seconds ago, and it didn’t even flinch.
But this one…this one went down.
Silver bullets. Silver bullets!
The second one had managed to hook its spindly legs into the window frame, like some kind of insect, and was in the process of pulling itself through the opening when Keo shot it in the chest. It let go and dropped backward, swallowed up by the darkness.
“Shorty!” Keo shouted. “Let’s go!”
But Shorty didn’t move, not even when deformed shapes began climbing through the windows to their left and right along the floor. It was too dark for him to see anything beyond moving shadows. Not that Keo had to guess what was happening around him, because as soon as he killed the first two bloodsuckers, two—three—five more were trying to crawl in through the exact same space that had just been vacated.
Gather some supplies. Make some silver bullets. Go find Gillian.
What could possibly go wrong?
He flicked the fire selector on the submachine gun to full-auto and opened fire.
“Shorty!” he shouted over the clink-clink-clink of bullet casings falling against the tiled floor around him.
Silver 9mm bullets ripped through flesh and kept going, and the creatures fell like dominos in front of him, others swan diving back out of the window.
Then Boom! Boom! as Shorty began shooting. It was a bolt-action rifle, and each shot required him to manually reload. Keo remembered all those days on the road trying to convince the kid to switch to something more practical. But Shorty wouldn’t go for it. He was married to his Winchester.
Stupid kid, Keo thought, shouting again, “Shorty, come on!”
Because Shorty’s .308, as devastating as it was to a human body, was like throwing pebbles at the ghouls. His bullets tore through them, and some even hit the ones behind them—and it still kept going even then—but it didn’t stop them. Not for a moment. Not even for a millisecond. Keo wasn’t sure if the creatures even felt the bullet impacts.
“Shorty!”
He was backpedaling and firing, spraying from left to right, watching the bounding forms stumbling and falling. They were converging from every side now, literally pouring in through the windows across the floor, the tap-tap-tap! of bare feet against the carpet like a dozen stampeding herds at once.
Too many. Always too goddamn many...
Even as they collapsed left and right and over each other, more were climbing through the windows every second. Every half-second. He found breathing difficult as the floor began filling up with their stench. There was a never-ending stream of them, and he guessed this must be what it was like trying to hold back a flood with your bare hands.
And Shorty was standing in front of him, shooting and smashing the buttstock of his rifle into the creatures as they surged toward him. He was backpedaling, but not fast enough. Too slow. Way too slow.
“Shorty, goddammit!”
He didn’t know if the other man could hear him. Probably not. Shorty didn’t seem capable of moving any faster, and soon—
They were on top of him. Driving him to the floor.
Shorty started screaming.
Then the sea of black tar began changing directions and converging on Shorty. He saw Shorty’s hand sticking out of the squirming mass of shriveled skin and bony limbs.
Keo turned and ran, reloading at the same time, dropping the long, slender magazine. He didn’t have to look to perform the task. It was second nature by now.
He made a beeline for the same stairwell door he had come through earlier.
The tsunami of bare feet slapping against the floor burst through his eardrums as the creatures gave chase. He guessed not every one of them was going for Shorty anymore. How many were back there on his heels? A dozen? Hundreds? How many undead things could fit into one floor, he wondered.
Too many. Always too damn many…
Keo didn’t look back. It was pointless because he knew what was back there. And he didn’t want to see Shorty’s death. He couldn’t even hear the kid’s screams anymore. He couldn’t hear his own breathing, for that matter—only the relentless pounding in his chest.
Around him, their stench overwhelmed the stale odor of the abandoned floor.
They were fast, but he was faster. A steady diet of beef jerky and protein had kept Keo lean, and the nearly three-month long jaunt through the woods, being hunted by psychos with assault rifles, had forced him into the best shape of his life. He was also blessed with a long stride, one of the benefits of being six-one.
He grabbed for the stairwell door with his left hand, his right still wrapped around the MP5SD with the forefinger against the trigger. He twisted the doorknob with one fluid motion, pulled the door open with another, and was greeted by total darkness—
—except for the pair of yellow, crooked teeth coming at him.
He squeezed off a burst, slicing the creature in half. It fell soundlessly, thick clumps of black liquid splashing the wall behind it.
Silver bullets. Silver fucking bullets!
Keo jumped over the shriveled-up dead thing.
Sounds—coming from below this time. That meant he couldn’t go down. Which wasn’t his first choice anyway, but it would have been nice to actually have a choice.
So what was left?
He glanced up the flight of stairs, just as—
—THOOM-THOOM-THOOM as they crashed into the stairwell door behind him with the intensity of rabid dogs that hadn’t eaten in days, weeks, maybe months.
He went up.
They were coming. Fast-moving bastards. The manic tap-tap-tap! of bare feet slammed against the solid concrete of the stairwell, echoing along the length of the confined space. He didn’t look back, didn’t look down. The rush of wind caught up to him from behind as the fifth-floor stairwell door was flung open and they poured inside, the very distinctive splatter of feet against black blood spilled by the dead ghoul ringing in his ears.
He reached the rooftop door faster than he expected and burst outside, boots crunching against familiar loose gravel. He darted across the wide-open spaces, intimately aware that he was going to run out of space soon.
Very, very soon.
Darkness, moonlight, and a pair of smaller buildings around him, including one directly in front. A two-story building, with a bar on the first floor and living quarters on the second. He had scouted it earlier in the day with Zachary but hadn’t gone inside because the windows and doors were locked. The most important thing, though, was that the windows were not covered, which meant there were no nests inside.
That was the good news.
The bad news? The building was three stories down, with just over four meters of empty space between rooftops. It was going to be a hell of a drop if he couldn’t make the jump.
London Bridge is falling down, falling down…
Shut up!
They flooded out of the stairwell behind him and were battling against the loose gravel. He wondered if it looked nearly as comical as it
sounded.
I should have brought a camera.
He unslung his pack, and with a meter left until he reached the end, flung it and watched it disappear into the night. He glimpsed the edge—was he running to it, or was it coming to him?—and lunged forward with his left leg, landed solidly, and catapulted himself up and over and forward through the cold, chilly Louisiana air.
So this is what it feels like to fly.
The rooftop of the building next door came into view as he plummeted back down through the darkness, way faster than he had anticipated. He tried to pick up where his pack had landed while he was still in the air so he wouldn’t have to waste time looking for it later—
—If my legs aren’t broken when I land—
—and saw it lying almost near the far edge. Jesus, how the hell had it gotten that far?
I must be stronger than I look.
He almost laughed out loud, but before he could put thought into action, the flat rooftop was there and he managed to land in a crouch, his momentum carrying him forward into a tuck and roll. He snapped back up on one bent knee, shocked and joyous that he was still alive, that neither one of his legs were broken even though pain shot through both and up his thighs, his entire body seeming to vibrate for a few seconds afterward.
Daebak!
He was on his feet instantly and rushing toward his pack. He snatched it up and slipped it through his arms as—thoomp! thoomp!—two of the creatures landed on the rooftop behind him.
He glanced back, saw them floundering like fish out of water, bony arms and legs snapping in every direction and at one point actually became entangled with one another. But that didn’t last, and they quickly became two separate creatures again—
He shot them and watched them drop, even as more fell out of the inky black sky like raindrops, landing one after another…after another. Bones snapped and broke, then another, then another still—not that it stopped any of them.
They kept coming—falling over and over, then actually on top of one another when they ran out of space. And still they kept dropping out of the sky…