100 Days in Deadland (Deadland Saga, #1)(74)
“Yeah. You’re starting to get the park figured out.”
I smiled and leaned back. Clutch had covered more of the park than I had so far. He’d found us the most secluded rendezvous cabin should we get separated and couldn’t get back to the office. He’d shown it to me a couple times already, but it was easy to get lost in hundreds of wooded acres with no straight roads.
I noticed the time on the truck’s clock. “Oh, it’s almost nine.”
“Got it.” He clicked on the radio to AM 1340. Every day, for a mid-morning break, we’d sit in the truck to listen to Hawkeye’s broadcasts.
Like clockwork, the usual static silenced in favor of a voice. The broadcaster was either a hundred miles away or had poor equipment. We could barely hear his broadcast unless we turned the radio all the way up.
“This is Hawkeye broadcasting on AM 1340.
I have more news about zed-free zones for you. It sounds like Montana has built a city with high walls. But, if you are thinking of making the trip to Montana City, think again. Right now, they are only allowing Montana citizens into the city. Anyone else will be turned away. But, what’s important is that there are zed-free zones out there. There is hope from the plague monsters wandering our lands.
For news closer to home, Lt. Col. Lendt’s announcement last week that requires any Iowa militia to be commanded by a military officer has stirred backlash across the state. I’ve heard rumors that some militias are banding together against Camp Fox rather than submitting to Lendt’s power play.
The militias are made up of good people, folks who’ve stepped up and volunteered to fight against the zed scourge. And now the government is trying to control them.
Here’s my question for today: if all militias are forced to report into Camp Fox, what’s to stop Lendt from misusing his power and becoming a despot over us survivors? I leave you with a warning: absolute power corrupts absolutely, my friends.
This is Hawkeye broadcasting on AM 1340. Be safe, stay strong, and know that you’re not alone.”
Hawkeye rarely had good news and showed no love for Lendt, but the final words he spoke every day grounded me.
You’re not alone.
Even though we hadn’t seen another living soul for ten days.
A large sign displaying gas prices that would never change again peeked out from the trees. As we neared the station, the stink hit me, and I wrinkled my nose. “Oh, that’s horrible.”
“Jesus,” Clutch said, holding his forearm over his nose. “Smells like the sewer backed up.”
“Lovely,” I muttered. Add one more annoying trait of the apocalypse to an every-growing list.
Today, we at least had the benefit of dealing with fewer zeds at the gas station than we would have if the outbreak had hit during tourist season. Even so, there were still a half-dozen cars in the lot. Four zeds wandering nearby bee-lined for our truck the moment we approached. One was covered in dried mud, one was naked and chewed up, and all four were shriveled by months under the sun.
“How the hell do some of these guys end up naked?” I asked. Seeing a zed was bad enough. Seeing all of a zed was enough to make a stomach roil.
Clutch shrugged. “Caught on the shitter, maybe.”
They stumbled in our direction as though coming to greet us, and Clutch stepped on the gas, taking down two with his first hit. He put the truck into reverse and rammed into the third. The naked zed moved too slowly and was too far away to be a problem.
Clutch stopped near the underground gas tank cover.
I swung open the door and clobbered the female zed struggling to get up with two newly broken legs. Clutch was out of the truck with a tire iron and taking down the least rotted of the bunch, and I walked up to the crusty mud-covered zed and gagged.
Shit. Not mud. My eyes watered, and I swung extra hard to make sure I finished it off quickly and moved away.
When I turned to Clutch, he was just finishing off the naked zed that had finally reached us.
“Keep an eye out.” He got down on his knees and pulled out his knife.
I stood at his back, gripping the bat covered in layers of dark stains, and analyzed the wide one-story building. The gas station was covered in slate and had three glass doors, one to each section: the gas station in the middle, the liquor side to the left, and a small café to the right. The glass was shattered on the large door to the gas station. Two zeds lay dead in the shadow of the overhang.
“Damn,” I muttered. “Looks like we aren’t the first here.”
With some muscle, he pried the cover open and peered inside. “At least there’s plenty of gas.”
“How do you know it’s not diesel?” I asked.
“Smells like gas,” he replied, going for the hose. He dropped one end into the underground tank, and held out the other with a smirk. “Want to do the honors?”
I handed him the bat and grabbed the hose. “Sure.” I opened the gas cap, and then sucked hard at the hose.
I’d never siphoned gas before, but it looked to be a relatively easy thing to do.
Nothing happened.
I looked up.
He smirked. “Keep sucking.”
I scowled but did what he said. At first there was nothing, then came the fumes, then the liquid.
“Ack!” I coughed out in between spitting out gasoline and shoving the hose into the truck’s gas tank. Tears ran down my face. “That shit burns.” More coughing.