The hum had returned.
“Get everybody ready,” the sheriff said, wiping a drop of blood from his nostril onto his sleeve. “We might have to move out fast.”
A tree fell over a hundred yards away along the road, then another slightly closer. The car alarm cut off abruptly and a puff of smoke and dust rose in the air from that direction. The hum dissipated, the vibration faded, and everything went suddenly quiet again. Janet and Bill stared out at the view for more than a minute, expecting further collapses, but it appeared that it was over again, for now. Bill leaned forward. She thought he was going to kiss her, but instead he used the sleeve of his shirt to wipe fresh blood away from her top lip.
I hadn’t even noticed I was bleeding.
“That was too close,” Janet said.
The sheriff looked along the road to the left, then back at Janet.
“That’s something we can agree on. I was of a mind to sit it out and wait for the CDC to find us. But now I’m thinking we can’t afford the time. I say we head back to the Western Road and take our chances again at the barricade.”
Janet watched the smoke plume dissipate. If the collapse had been a hundred yards closer, there was more than a good chance that the bar, and all of the people in it, would already be gone.
“I think you’re right,” she replied. “I’d feel better to be on the move; at least it would feel like we were doing something, rather than just waiting to be swallowed up. And at least in daylight we’ve got more chance of avoiding the collapses.”
Bill nodded, and ran a hand across her cheek.
“Chin up,” he said. “It’s time to tell the troops the bad news.”
They went back inside the bar. Janet called Fred and the girl through from the kitchen. Both of them looked pale and tired, but they said nothing as they joined the others, many of whom were now struggling up out of sleep.
When everyone was awake, the sheriff called for quiet.
“We plan on heading out,” he said. “We need to get you folks to safety, and we’re hoping the CDC will be more amenable now that they’ve had a chance to monitor the situation and get the lay of the land. I’m guessing somebody apart from the infantry we met last night will be in charge by now and they might at least listen to reason. But I ain’t no dictator, and I don’t want to lead you where you don’t want to go, so I’ll do what you all want.”
Janet spoke up.
“I’m with the sheriff. Some of you need treatment I can’t give you here. And there’s a new hole formed just down the road. It’s not safe to stay.”
That statement brought a chorus of raised voices, but Janet was relieved to hear little dissent with the view that they should leave the bar.
“A show of hands then,” the sheriff said. “Who wants to try our luck at the Western Road?”
There were only two dissenters, neither of whom was willing to stay behind on their own. Janet started to get them all moving when the sheriff called for silence again.
“Listen. I hear something.”
Janet heard it too, a distant rumble that vibrated through the floor to be felt underfoot.
“It’s back,” someone shouted. “It heard us plotting.”
They almost had a panic on their hands.
“Shut up and listen,” Bill shouted, but they weren’t in the mood to pay him any heed.
“We’re going to get all ate up,” someone shouted. People screamed, while others made a dash for the door. The sheriff took out his pistol and fired a shot into the ceiling. That got their attention quickly enough. The whole bar went quiet.
“I said, listen,” Bill shouted.
The rumble resolved itself into the sound of heavy engines, getting closer fast.
“It’s Ellen,” somebody shouted. “The old bitch actually did it. We’re saved.”
The sheriff went back to the main door and looked out. Janet peered over his shoulder. A small convoy of military vehicles drove into the parking lot. Several of the trucks were mounted with heavy artillery.
If this is getting saved, I’m not sure I want any part of it.
It was a moot point anyway. There was no need to go looking for the CDC. The CDC had come to them.
* * *
The lead vehicle came to a halt and two men in HAZMAT suits got out, carrying a woman slumped between them. Fresh blood showed through a bandage round the person’s head, and she didn’t have to look up for Janet to recognize Ellen Simmons.
Janet tried to push past the sheriff, intent on going to the woman’s aid, but Bill stood in her way and refused to budge. He pointed at the two men.
“They’re carrying rifles across their backs. I ain’t about to let you get yourself shot.”
“Ellen needs help and…”
“And she’ll be here in ten seconds. She can wait that long, until we see the lay of the land,” he said. “Leave the talking to me.”
The two suited men brought the injured woman right up to the door of the bar before they stopped.
“She’ll be staying with you until we get the field camp set up,” the one on the left said. “And I’ll be taking your weapon, Sheriff.”
“Like hell you will,” Bill said. He reached for the pistol. Before he could finish the movement the two men in front of him had dropped Ellen Simmons to the ground and had weapons of their own in their hands. They had unslung and aimed the rifles so quickly that Janet had scarcely had time to register it.
“Don’t do anything stupid, Sheriff,” the one who had spoken previously said. “I’m not in the habit of killing civilians, and I’ve had about enough of it for one day.”
Janet put a hand on Bill’s arm.
“Do what they say. They’ve got a protocol, Bill. They’re just following orders.”
“That’s what the Nazis said,” the sheriff replied. He made a show of slowly taking his gun from the holster using only his fingertips, and dropped it at his feet.
Ellen Simmons tried to rise, stumbled, and fell. Bill crouched and caught her just before her head hit the ground. He helped her to her feet. She leaned against him. Her eyes rolled up to show only white, and she let out a pitiful moan.
“What did you do to her?” Bill said, anger clear in his voice.
“She’ll live,” the man in the HAZMAT suit said. He didn’t seem to care either way. “And that’s more than can be said for the three she had with her. She tried to drive through the barricade. She’s lucky I don’t just shoot her here and now and be done with it.”
“And who are you?” Bill asked.
“General Frinton,” the man said. “I’m the man in charge.”
Janet doubted that very much, but held her tongue.
The other man bent and retrieved Bill’s pistol, stowing it away in a deep pocket in his suit. Bill kept his attention focused on the general. The two men stared at each other for long seconds, and Janet felt tension build. Bill clenched and unclenched his fists. She saw the need to fight grow in him. She put a hand on his arm, he turned to look at her, and suddenly the tension dissipated as he managed a smile. He turned back to the general.
“So what happens now?” Bill asked.
“You sit tight. We’re setting up a field camp and we’ll get round to everybody in due course.”
“But the holes…”
“We can have choppers here in seconds if need be.”
That might not be quick enough.
“And what about the apparitions , the protoplasm?”
“We’ll talk about that later,” the man replied. Janet heard the skepticism in his voice. “For now, we’ve got a…”
“…protocol,” Bill answered sarcastically. “I know.”
“Stay inside until we call for you,” the general said, turning away. “My men have orders to shoot anyone who tries to leave. I think you know by now that they’ll have no qualms about doing so?”
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