All three were head shots and West felt a surge of triumph,
“Go!” West pushed Cakes, got him moving. Its
They ran, stopping at the open spaces, pushing past panicking soldiers. Weapons were discharged from all areas of the camp. The men were sloppy, disorganized, terrified, and West spared a dark thought for Sanderson. The doctors might be top-notch, but the CO obviously hadn’t run drills or maintained any level of training.
Somebody shouted that there was one by the mess and a small surge of stumbling enlisted and low-level officers nearly knocked them down trying to get away, stampeding like cattle. He saw a sergeant leading a handful of armed men west towards the center of the camp, two with combat shotguns, one with a rifle and a belt.
Praise Jesus, someone was putting up a defense!
West’s optimism was short lived. As he and Cakes passed the wide opening where their paths intersected, he looked down and saw three
“Fire!” The captain pointed his own standard issue at the closest creature and opened up. Then they were all firing, and the
West didn’t wait to see what happened, he knew what was coming and they had to get armed and back under cover before the compound cleared out. They ran ahead, chased by screams from the soldiers.
The motor pool was lit up, Jeeps revving, gears grinding. A captain was organizing a handful of people to evacuate the patients, but he was mostly drowned out by the engines.
“Holy cow!” a private cried, his voice cracking. “Look at ‘em all!”
West turned and looked, out into the dark behind the compound. There were a dozen, two dozen of them, glowing, hopping dead men coming from every direction, heading in every direction. He thought of crickets, or locusts. They moved erratically, a small hop, a bigger one — and then a sudden blur of motion and the thing was twenty feet away from its last position. It hurt West’s mind to see them move. East and west, they hopped over the hills or behind the trees, in and out of sight. A handful filtered through the deserted village, stumbling right through some of the little hooches, their arms straight in front of them. Some were moving south; more were headed for the MASH.
“Armory,” said Cakes, and pointed to a small crowd in front of a Quonset. A corporal and three privates were handing out arms, mostly M2 carbines and boxes of cartridges. They were blocking the door. The air shook again with that deep, physically unpleasant sound. West thought maybe it was the
West pushed to the front. “We need something bigger. What else have you got?”
The corporal’s voice shook. “I don’t know.”
“What do you mean, you don’t know? What’s your armament?”
“I drive an ambulance,” the young man said. “Look for yourself, we’re bugging out.”
He and a handful of the soldiers took off running towards the deserting Jeeps.
West and Cakes pushed into the unlocked room. Inside were two long, cramped aisles maintained for shit — empty racks next to over-packed ones, boxes stacked on boxes in no order. Outside there was screaming and shouting and more of that terrible vibration.
“Find us something,” West said, and Cakes started hefting and tossing.