“How can there be so many?” Jase asked from the backseat.
No one answered. In fact, no one spoke for many long minutes. I gripped the yoke and twisted my hands around it. Clutch scribbled on the map. I couldn’t tell what Jase and Bill were doing behind me. My mind was too busy dealing with shock. I didn’t need to be an actuary to do the math. There was nothing we could do to defend Camp Fox against such numbers.
We were absolutely, completely fucked.
My brows furrowed as I held back a sob. The unfairness of it all pissed me off. We worked so hard to survive. We’d finally gotten to the point where we felt a step ahead of the zeds.
And now this?
Like Manny’s group, we could only run, but where could we go? The massive herds seemed to cover an entire line of latitude as they moved south.
Bill lunged forward and pointed straight ahead. “There,” he said, wagging his finger. “See that? The university is coming up.”
I jumped, startled. “Get buckled in!”
“It’s SMSU. We’re there,” he said, not moving.
I squinted and made out the connected buildings. We were still at least five miles out and I throttled back to slow the plane and descend. “All right, guys. Keep an eye out for zeds.”
“They would’ve all left with the herds,” Bill said.
“Do you know that for sure?” I countered, adding in flaps to slow the plane to near stall speed.
He said nothing.
I sighed. “Where’s that street I can land on, Bill?”
He leaned forward more. “Birch Street,” he said as if I could read street signs from up here. “It’s just to the south of the dorms. We kept it clear in case we had to pull out.”
“It’s east-west, right?” I asked, looking once more at his roughly drawn map.
“What?”
I made a motion with my hand. “Does the road go north and south or east and west?”
“Oh, east and west. You can’t miss it. It’s the main street for the university.”
As we neared the small university, I slowed the plane and dropped in as much flaps as I could without stalling. Once I had the street in sight, I nodded. “I’ve got it.”
I frowned as I took in the university. During a typical scouting run, zeds dotted streets of any town I flew over. Here, other than the random zed crawling across the ground or a rotting corpse, I saw nothing. The entire university seemed devoid of zeds. “You guys see anything?” I asked.
“Nothing yet. Just a few stragglers,” Jase said.
“Same here,” Clutch said. “From what I can tell, those stragglers look pretty decrepit.”
“You’re going past the street. Down there! Down there!”
I flipped off the intercom but could still hear Bill’s yelling even through my headset. The street was narrow, only two lanes lined with trees and streetlamps. It had a ninety-degree curve on the eastern edge and a forty-five on the west. I could make it work, but there wasn’t much room for error, and no room for a late-decision go-around.
Clutch squeezed my knee, and I turned. “You sure you want to try it?” he yelled since I’d turned off the intercom.
I looked back down at the street. I had to make the call. If I continued to circle, the engine noise would draw all remaining zeds into the area. I glanced at Bill. His eyes were wide and pleading. It would’ve been easy to fly over and drop a bag, letting the survivors make their way to their families and friends on their own. But, if I were in Bill’s shoes, this close to my family…
“Damn it,” I muttered and dropped in the rest of the flaps. There was no way I couldn’t not land. I may have lost my parents, but if it was Clutch or Jase down there, I would have to see for myself. Bill deserved the same.
I lined up for a long final approach. I wanted to land as short as possible because neither the length nor the width of the street was forgiving for a botched landing. My grip was firm on the yoke. I had to get it right. The stall warning sounded, and the ground came up quickly. The wheels hit hard. The plane bounced before settling down. I stepped on the brakes to stop faster than I could with a taildragger.
I pulled off my headset and looked around to find no zeds running out to greet us. I bit my lip. “Well, that wasn’t my finest landing.”
“We didn’t crash, so I consider it a success,” Clutch said.
Jase tapped my shoulder. “I’ll cover you while you get lined up for takeoff.”
I nodded and opened the door. I brought my seat forward. He squeezed out from behind me and hopped outside. Bill leaned between Clutch and me as I started to taxi back the opposite direction I’d landed. Jase walked alongside the Cessna as I taxied, ready to take out any random zed that came at us.
“What are you doing?” Bill asked. “You’re going past the dorms.”
“We’ll check them out on foot. First, I need the plane ready in case we need to make a quick takeoff.”
He muttered something and leaned back. Suddenly, I found myself pressed forward against the yoke as he squeezed passed me. “Hey!”
Bill jumped out of the plane and ran back toward the dorms, carrying the bag of letters.
“Idiot,” Clutch muttered.
I shook my head. “He’s going to get himself killed.” I taxied the plane all the way back to the eastern edge of the street and turned around, setting the plane up for an immediate takeoff. “I’m half tempted to just leave him and head back.”
As I cut the engine, Jase walked around the front, still scanning the area.
Clutch grabbed his rifle.
I put my hand on his forearm and fought to say the words I needed to say. “You should stay with the plane, in case we need to make a quick takeoff.” I inhaled before he had a chance to speak. “You know us. Jase and I won’t do anything stupid. We’re just going to check on the dorms, that’s it.”
“I know. I trust both of you. It’s the other guy I don’t trust.”
“We’ll be wheels up in ten minutes. You stay here and sweep for us in case zeds start trickling this way. Okay?”
He sat there, gripping his rifle. After a moment, he hit his legs, startling me.
“I hate this. I fucking hate this,” he said before tilting his head back against the headrest.
My heart ached for him. “I know,” I said softly and touched his cheek. “This is a temporary inconvenience, that’s all. You’ll be walking soon. I know it. We just have to take it one day at a time.”
His lips tightened. “I’ll see you in ten.”
After a moment, I dropped my hand, unbuckled, grabbed my gear, and climbed out.
“Be careful,” he said suddenly. “I’ve got a bad vibe about this place.”
I gave a small nod and walked away, glancing back to see Clutch already focused on scanning the area.
Jase came up to my side. Looking around, he gave an exaggerated shiver. “This place gives me the creeps. Everything’s been trampled. There’s not even a shrub left.”
To my right was a parking lot filled with cars. Most were parked askew, as though they’d been forcibly shoved out of their parking space and into the spot next to them. A couple had even been rolled over. I hadn’t seen any mobile zeds, but no survivors came out to greet us, either. Both would’ve heard us fly over.
I slung my spear onto my shoulder and kept my rifle ready. “Let’s make this quick.”
We walked toward the dorms where Bill had headed. We took slow steps, constantly scanning our full three-sixty, though I knew Clutch had our six covered. While I wanted to get the hell out of there, I didn’t rush. Just because Bill had run in half-cocked didn’t mean that we had to put ourselves at risk.
A zed without legs reached out like a beggar. I stepped to the side, and it tried to drag itself to us. I didn’t waste energy killing it; it was in such bad shape that the only way it could latch onto a victim was if someone fell on it.
The ominous feeling in my gut grew worse as we approached the first dorm. The doors were propped wide open by a mangled corpse. Bones, tufts of hair, and cloth shreds were about all that remained.