Resurrection: A Zombie Novel - - (the best motivational books txt) 📗
- Author: -
- Performer: -
Book online «Resurrection: A Zombie Novel - - (the best motivational books txt) 📗». Author -
They gathered in the living room of the guesthouse but didn’t speak for a while. Everyone needed to process what had happened. There was a lot to think about.
Annie had more to think about than anyone else.
Were they going to shoot Parker now? Banish him? Let him rejoin the group?
Against her better judgment, she sympathized with him. She knew how it felt to transform and how it felt to come back. Just as important, Parker must sympathize with her more now than he did. They’d been through the same hell. Parker was the only one in the world bonded to her like this.
His hell was worse, actually. He bit and killed one of his friends.
It wasn’t entirely for nothing. She did pass her immunity onto him. He got lucky. They got lucky. Apparently Parker did have the same blood type. The odds were forty percent. But she couldn’t pass her immunity onto the others. Just trying might kill them.
But the disease was preventable! If only they had a hospital, a lab, and some doctors.
And what about Kyle? Did Annie have a future with him after everything that had happened the past couple of days?
She finally spoke up.
“We need help.”
Nobody argued.
“We’re down to three now if we don’t include Parker,” she said.
“We’re not including Parker,” Kyle said. “So yeah, we’re down to just three.”
“Frank is dead,” Annie said.
“Because of Parker,” Kyle said.
“Because of us,” Hughes said.
“None of this would have happened if he was a civilized person,” Kyle said.
“Nor would this have happened if we’d done things differently,” Annie said. “It’s amazing that he’s alive at all. My blood could have killed him. The virus sure as hell should have.”
“Oh don’t worry,” Kyle said. “The virus didn’t finish him off, but we will.”
“Mmm,” Hughes said. Annie had no idea what that meant.
“You kill him,” Annie said, “and our experiment will be a complete waste.”
“It’s a complete waste anyway, Annie,” Kyle said. “Someone should explain to you the notion of sunk costs. You passed your immunity to him. Great. But you can’t pass it to us whether or not we keep him alive.”
“We need doctors,” Annie said.
“What does that have to do with anything?”
“What we really need is the Center for Disease Control.”
“Where is the CDC anyway?” Hughes said.
“It’s in Atlanta,” Annie said.
“You sure?” Hughes said.
“I grew up near Atlanta,” Annie said. “Sort of near Atlanta. I’m from South Carolina. I know that part of the country as well as Kyle knows this part.”
“What do you want to do?” Kyle said. “Send them an email?”
Annie looked hard at Kyle.
“You’ve got to be fucking kidding,” he said.
Hughes’ face was unreadable.
“The West Coast was hit first,” Annie said. “Washington before Oregon, and Oregon before California. We’re at ground zero here. This is the worst place in the world for a vaccine to pop up.”
She watched Kyle’s face carefully. He was crestfallen. And angry. He knew that if she convinced Hughes, there would be no little new-world utopia for him in Eastsound.
“You may be right,” Hughes said, “but I’m going to say something anyway because it needs to be said.”
“Go ahead,” Annie said.
“We don’t know you’re the only one,” Hughes said. “For all we know, ten percent of the population has built-in immunity. I might have it myself and not even know it. Parker might have already had it. We don’t know if we’ve accomplished a damn thing here except getting Frank killed.”
“That’s possible,” Annie said. “But for all we know, I’m a freak of nature and medical science.” She let that sink in for a moment before continuing. “Although my sister might be immune too, and possibly one or both of our parents.”
“Where are your parents?” Hughes said.
“South Carolina. Assuming they’re still alive. They might not be. My sister probably isn’t.”
She accepted now that she would never see Jenny again. She hadn’t finished grieving yet for her sister, but she would finish in time. When she could.
“The East Coast was hit later,” Annie said. “They might have suffered less damage. They might still have functioning medical facilities if they fortified them well enough in advance.”
Kyle closed his eyes. He did not want to hear this, but he could not close his ears.
“CDC is in Atlanta,” Hughes said. “In the South. In the East.”
“Do I need to say it?” Annie said.
Hughes looked at her intently and shook his head.
“You’re saying we should go to Atlanta?” Kyle said.
“I didn’t say it,” Annie said. “You did. And yes, I think we should go there.”
“That’s insane.”
“They can develop a vaccine,” Annie said. “They can test your blood type and inoculate you on the spot if you’re a match.”
“You have no idea if the CDC still even exists,” Kyle said. “It probably doesn’t!”
“It might,” Hughes said. “It’s 4,000 miles away from ground zero. But the roads are impassable. We can’t take a boat. And none of us knows how to fly.”
Kyle put his face in his hands. He looked exhausted, a defenseless emotional wreck at the mercy of forces beyond him. His dream to start over on Orcas Island was sound. It was a beautiful idea, but it was a fantasy.
“So we walk,” Annie said.
Hughes knew they wouldn’t have to walk the whole way. They could wait for winter to set in and for most of those things to die off. Ride snowmobiles over the Cascade Mountains, drive a truck on the open roads of the American deserts, and take a boat down the Mississippi River to the Gulf of Mexico. That would get them most of the way, but Atlanta was more than 100 miles inland in Georgia. Winters in the American South were too mild to kill all those things. The trip would be dangerous, more dangerous than anything any of them had ever attempted before, but it could be done.
One unsolved piece, however, remained: Parker.
Kyle paced back and forth in and out of the kitchen. The kid seriously needed a Xanax.
“We can’t kill him,” Annie said.
“He tried to kill me, Annie,” Kyle said. “He tried to kill me. For no reason at all.”
“You damn near got him killed on that other island,” Hughes said. “You damn near got all of us killed.”
“That wasn’t me,” Kyle said. “It was those things. And nobody died on that island.”
“You’re still alive,” Hughes said.
“I didn’t try to kill anybody. He did. Doesn’t intent mean anything to you people?”
“We punished him pretty severely, bro,” Hughes said. “Let me ask you something. Is what he did to you worse than what we did to him?”
Kyle paused before speaking again. “We had to do it that way.” He sounded a little unsure of himself.
“We most certainly didn’t,” Hughes said. “Not that way.”
“Frank got killed because we did it that way,” Annie said.
“You’re still mad that we set Parker up to be bit?” Kyle said. “Frank still would have died if we’d done it your way and injected him. Frank died because Parker bit him, not because Parker was bit. This is on all of us, including you. Especially you, Annie, because the whole thing was your idea in the first place.”
Annie bit her lip. Kyle was right about that much. Hughes agreed with Annie that they couldn’t kill Parker. Not now. Not after what they’d done to him. Not when they were down another man.
“I need him,” Annie said.
“What do you mean, you need him?” Kyle said.
“He’s the only person who understands what I’ve been through. Hopefully he’s the only one who ever will. God forbid you ever have to go through it.”
“It’s not all about you,” Kyle said. “It’s certainly not about your damn feelings. This is about safety for all of us.”
“There’s safety in numbers,” Hughes said. “Three of us aren’t enough. Hell, four aren’t enough.”
It was time for Hughes to step up and take charge, not just when everyone’s lives were in danger, but to take charge in general. He wasn’t up to it before—and truthfully he still wasn’t—but he
Comments (0)