Part 6 (1/2)
”Just some government lackey wanting to wish us luck.”
They could see the helicopter dropping in for a landing as the garage doors opened.
”Oh yeah, and they upgraded our ride too, kid. We're flying this beast to Mobile. Let's get at it.”
A Difference of Opinion.
The car raced along Highway 10 with Christa at the wheel. I don't really like taking this road given its close proximity to the Gulf, but it's the quickest way home. If the authorities figure out what happened on that boat, the towns along the coast are the first places they'll look. These two are a disaster waiting to happen, and I really don't want to have them out in the wild for any longer than absolutely necessary. The sooner I get them back the better.
Andreas woke from his slumber in the back of the car and said, ”How much longer till we get there, boss? I'm getting a little peckish back here. Could use one of those humans to chew on. Any chance you've got some in the freezer back at your place?”
Christa tightened her grip on the steering wheel. ”Trying to aggravate me is not going to get us there any faster or make our lives any easier. You know darn well there's no reason for you to kill humans now. You can survive on regular food just as well as they can. Better actually with your improved biology.”
”Improved biology? What's that supposed to mean?”
”It just means you're different. You can do some things better than most people.”
”So, it's true. We're better than everyone else.”
”I didn't say you were better, I said you could do some things better. That's all. It doesn't make you a better person. In your case, I'd say you're a little worse than average.”
Ignoring Christa's last remark, Andreas nudged Leekasha awake and asked Christa, ”So, if we're so much better than the rest of them, why have you been hiding out in the swamps in a hole for all these years?”
”I'm not hiding, and it's not a hole.”
”It's a sinkhole, isn't it? It swallowed up that entire swamp and all the buildings around it. Sounds like a hole to me.”
”It's an entire network of underground caves. It goes on for miles, and has plenty of nice spots to live in. The water drained from the upper sections years ago, and it's perfectly dry where I built my shelter. It seemed a shame to let all those building materials from the homes that were wrecked go to waste. It'll be a little crowded with the three of us there, but we'll be able to lay low for a while. No one has been there since it formed. Just me.”
Leekasha spoke up. ”Anything that keeps me away from the b.a.s.t.a.r.ds that tortured me all these years is fine with me. I'll do anything not to go back to that.”
Andreas smirked. ”Don't worry, honey, I'll keep you safe.” He slid over next to her. ”Just stick close to me and you'll be fine.” Leekasha offered him a half smile. ”Don't listen to the driver either. She's not as smart as she may seem. All these years she's been living in some hole instead of some big mansion somewhere. You've seen how she controls all those people. She could have anything she wanted but she chooses to live like a rat.”
Christa nearly swerved the car off the road. ”I do not live like a rodent! I told you, my place is nice. I'm just there for privacy and security. Those caverns stretch for miles. I've already found lots of spots where I can make it to the surface and no one would ever find me. There are hundreds more I haven't even explored.”
Leekasha spoke up. ”I really wish you two would stop the bickering. It's all you've done since we got off that d.a.m.n boat. It's almost as bad as being locked up in my own head all those years. We're all in this together, why can't you two just figure out a way to agree on something?”
”Oh, that's easy, honey,” Andreas answered. ”We both agree that this whole country is screwed up.”
”Stop calling me honey,” Leekasha replied. ”That's not who I am.”
”We do agree that something has to be done about the drug and how it controls everyone,” Christa said. ”We just need to find a peaceful way to change things. We can't be killing humans every time one of us comes out of the drug's control.”
Andreas laughed. ”We already have a way to do it, and it doesn't have to be peaceful. It just has to happen.”
”You trying to start a war, Andreas? That's where you're headed with that kind of thinking. Do you remember what happened last time? Do you? Does your brain go back that far?” Andreas and Leekasha never answered. ”I'll tell you what happened. We lost. All of us that were different lost. We ended up a bunch of drugged-out freaks under the control of our masters. This country has reverted back to slavery days, and if we don't do anything about it, this is going to spread around the world. You have no idea what's going on. I've been very aware of what's happened the last six years. Other countries around the world now want what we have.”
”So?” commented Leekasha. ”What's so bad about that? Maybe getting out of this country would be good for us. We could start over in a place that doesn't hate us.”
Christa pulled the car over and turned around. ”You don't understand. They don't want people like you and me and him over there. They want the drugged-out version. They want us controlled and sedated. This country has recovered from fifteen years of war faster than any other country in the history of the planet. The economy, the technology, the quality of life. It's all gotten better. We've gone from being a bombed-out third-world country to on par with the best places in the world.”
”It never felt that great for us,” Andreas said.
”Exactly,” Christa said. ”Not for us, and they don't care. If anyone realizes the mental anguish every one of us goes through ... They're keeping it under wraps. What they do know though is that this fantastic recovery is a direct result of having a huge obedient slave work force. Estimates say there are ten of us for every one of them. Zombie slaves work practically nonstop. For free. They just tell us what to do and we do it. The rest of the countries see that, and they want a piece of it. They're afraid now. Afraid that their economies will become subservient to the Americas'. You can bet there are deals being made behind closed doors in darkened board rooms to start exporting us. We're just a commodity. The longer they do this, the more widespread it becomes, and the better they get at it. We need to work together to break their hold on us. But not with a war. We lost the last one, and I don't want to live and die in another one.”
Christa could see the effect her plea was having on Andreas. He got very quiet, and just stared out the window. ”Andreas, talk to me. Tell me you understand what I'm saying. Tell me you'll work with me to make this better for all of us.”
Andreas turned to stare at Christa. He didn't say anything, but Christa could feel him in her head. ”Stay out of my head, Andreas. That's not what this is about, we need to work together.” Christa felt her hand moving towards the door handle without even wanting to open the door. ”Andreas, we need to keep going. We need to get back on the road. There's no time for this. You don't need to fight me.”
Andreas stared intensely, focusing his will as Christa opened the door and walked across the road, nearly getting hit by oncoming traffic. She never looked back, but just kept walking into the distance towards the Gulf. Leekasha reached for Andreas' arm, but he just brushed her away. He got into the driver's seat and turned the car around, heading back from where they had just come.
Mind Games.
Christa planted one more thought into the mind of the prison guard. He opened the door, allowing Christa to step inside. Abby rolled over in her bunk to look up and see Christa staring down at her. This has to be the stupidest thing I've ever tried. Controlling one human is tricky enough. Trying to control the guard and convince Abby to do what I want is going to take everything I have. d.a.m.n Andreas. If he wasn't so strong I'd go after him myself, but after the way he turned me into a puppet that would be nuts. I was lucky he just sent me away. He could have done a lot worse. Now it seems like he's on a spree. That latest string of murders in the Mobile area has to be him and Leekasha. The media keeps reporting the occurrences as tainted illegal drugs prompting suicides. These are all high-profile people from well-to-do families. They don't fit the profile of druggies.
Abby sat up in her bed and started to stand. Christa took her focus off the guard for a moment and mentally told Abby to stay seated. The guard fiddled with his keys and started to turn around. Christa flipped her mind back to the guard and told him to keep his hands off his keys and resume his position. He did so. This is going to be tough. I've got to make this quick.
Christa began scanning Abby's recent memories. It wasn't too hard now; she was just waking up and her mind wasn't alert. People are so much easier to control when they're only half awake. So, it's true. Chaz is finally awake again, and coming after us for them. They promised him his family back. Scanning Abby's mind was harder as the guard grew restless. He can't do that. Sorry, ya grumpy old b.a.s.t.a.r.d. I can't let you do that. You may get your family back, but I'll lose everything I've fought for all these years. I need Andreas and Leekasha. Maybe not the way they are now, but having you turn them over to the authorities would be a disaster. There's no way I can let you get your hands on me either. At least not yet. Time to seed some thoughts of destruction into Abby here.
Christa felt bad doing it, but it had to be done. She knew what Chaz was capable of, and he needed to be put off his game. By the time she left the cell, Abby was holding on to her sanity by a thread. As the guard escorted Christa from the prison, Abby's cell block neighbors were wide awake. Abby was throwing her belongings around the cell and yelling delusional rants. She screamed that she had been visited by the angel of death. That her children were burning in their cells, and that it was all her husband's fault. She demanded to see him, and didn't calm down till the sedatives kicked in.
The next morning her son Caius heard everything. At first he was amused to hear of his mother's hards.h.i.+ps, but feelings of amus.e.m.e.nt soon gave way to anger when he heard the stories from other inmates in his mother's cell block. Stories about a strange girl being escorted from her cell just before the tantrum, and how the guard escorting her paid no attention to his mother. It didn't really matter to him who the girl was. What he did know was this had to be something to do with his father. Somehow even in prison his father had managed to screw up his family's life just a little bit more. That would have to be rectified.
Choosing Sides.
Chaz drove the SUV into the upscale Mobile, Alabama neighborhood guided by the GPS. The serene, well-manicured neighborhood was interrupted at the top of the hill by the flas.h.i.+ng lights of emergency vehicles parked in front of a large plantation-style home. The red lights reflecting off the marble columns created a surreal effect.
”Trouble in paradise huh, Colonel?” Alex said.
”Sure looks like it. Trouble is what we're looking for, so that's a good thing.”
”I don't think I've ever seen so many mansions this close to each other. Usually they're surrounded by acres of trees hiding them from the main road.”
”If there's one thing the war taught people, it's that there's safety in numbers. You don't want to be miles away from the nearest help when a horde of freaks lands on your front lawn. Even the rich and famous learned that lesson.”
”These places look pretty new, Colonel. I don't think they were built during the war.”
”Not much was. These are new. Things have been developing pretty darn fast these days. There's nothing like moving to a new mansion in a new town to help you forget the terrors of the past. Even rich folks like to get a fresh start I suppose.”
A line of a half dozen protesters stood outside the police lines around the property. Their signs read FREEZE - FREE Zombies Everywhere and FREEZE h.e.l.l - open heaven and Today IS a cold day in h.e.l.l.
”What's that all about, Colonel?”
”Ah d.a.m.n, it's the old freak-huggers sect from the war. They wors.h.i.+ped the freaks during wartime. Their leaders had them convinced that death by zombies was a guaranteed ticket into heaven. I ran into them a few times.”
”I thought they pretty much gave up when the Pacize drug took effect.”
”Apparently not everybody gave up on a free ticket to heaven. It's easier I suppose than just being a good person all your life.”