Page 37 of For the Fallen


  “Sir, two of the men, the way they’re fighting, it just doesn’t look…I don’t know,

  it doesn’t look natural. It’s too quick. I feel like I’m watching those old time films

  where the speed was off and everything was moving faster than it should, especially

  the younger of the two. Are we sure we want to pick them up?”

  “Scared of a few civilians?” Barnes asked.

  “These ones I am,” he said, making sure he was not depressing the send button.

  ***

  I saw it before I heard it. It was a Huey helicopter, something I’d gone for many

  a ride in during my Corps days. Were we the subject of the extraction, or were the

  men that were shooting around us the chosen few? Although that made no sense, they

  could have left on their own volition at any time. Chain-fire erupted from the side

  of the Huey as it sought position over us. Between the blades slicing through the

  air, and the bullets slicing through the zombies, it was impossible to hear anything.

  The rescue sled that was being lowered left little doubt of their intentions though.

  “Justin!” I had to scream as loud as my throat was capable. When I realized he had

  heard me, I pointed to him then the basket. ‘You first,’ I mouthed. He shook his head

  and pointed to BT.

  ‘You!’ I mouthed and pointed angrily.

  There was a good chance that, if I sent BT up there first, they would roll him out

  the chopper on the other side once they saw the condition he was in. I needed someone

  up there to fight for his safety. Plus, he was looking more and more of a liability

  the longer he stayed down here. I was concerned for his safety as well. The basket

  took an agonizingly long time to descend. I swear the more they dropped the bucket,

  the higher the copter went. Plus, the backwash from the rotors was no easy thing to

  contend with. It blew everything into the air and, invariably, the eyes of all of

  us.

  “Looks like my helicopter!” Trip yelled.

  I wanted to tell him ‘No it didn’t, this one was still airborne.’

  I looked up in time to see the winch operator. He was making a two with his fingers.

  “Justin, grab Stephanie!” I screamed.

  She was shaking her head side to side when Justin grabbed her shoulder.

  “Get your fucking ass up there!” I screeched. “The longer you delay, the more danger

  we’re in!”

  She looked at me like I had stomped on a brood of kittens, but at least she went—albeit

  reluctantly. I can’t say I blame her. I’m sure that on more than one occasion Trip

  had taken her up in his Tonka toy. And now she had a respectful fear of anything that

  even remotely resembled it. I think I celebrated another birthday by the time the

  basket made it down again.

  “BT, you’re up!” I told him.

  “Not before Tracy and Travis,” he said as loudly as he could, which wasn’t that voluminous.

  “You’re taking my other kid up,” I told him.

  This was killing BT, but he dutifully grabbed Henry and got into the basket. Henry

  was like a board in BT’s arms, I don’t think the big dog was enjoying the ride. Then,

  upon closer inspection, I realized both BT and Henry were petrified. The duo were

  peering off into the horizon on some fixed spot, neither looking down at the horrendous

  scene below them. I thought it was kind of funny. Not that I’d say anything to BT

  about it…ever.

  The basket began its third descent. This was where it was going to get interesting.

  Everyone that was left now was one less person manning the walls, so to speak.

  “Travis, grab your mom!” I yelled, using a middleman as a buffer.

  I knew Tracy would agree to this as much as she did that one time I tried to buy a

  cow. And not a butchered one, either. Long story short, we never did get Bessie. Hey,

  what pseudo prepper doesn’t think about getting some livestock? Her argument was that

  we only had a fifteen-by-fifteen foot yard at the time. Always the pragmatist; or

  is it realist?

  She gave a half-hearted fight, but she was exhausted and knew she was only moments

  away from collapsing as it was. I was thrilled when they were halfway up. No matter

  what happened now, the majority of my family was safe. It now came down to Gary, Tommy,

  Trip, and me to hold down the fort. Maybe not the optimum fighting force, but I was

  happy to be alongside them nonetheless.

  “When do the tickets come out?” Trip asked, taking a moment to look into the side

  cutout in hopes that the prize redeeming coupons would begin to spit through. “I should

  be able to get a huge teddy bear after this game!”

  “Gary, you and Trip next!” I yelled.

  “What about you and Tommy?” he asked breathlessly.

  “We’ve got this,” I told him wearily. “Right?” I asked Tommy.

  He nodded at me grimly.

  By the time the bucket was down again, it nearly came down on Trip’s head, he and

  Gary had been pushed back that far by the zombies. I cut in front of them, creating

  the room they would need to get up into the air.

  ***

  “These guys are phenomenal,” Barnes said, more to himself as he looked through his

  binoculars. “No wonder they’re still alive.”

  “Keep an eye on the two that are still in the truck, sir,” the corporal said. “If

  I hadn’t seen it, I wouldn’t believe it. He spins that tire iron like it’s on a sprocket,

  and when it hits, I swear he goes halfway into the skull. And the older guy, he looks

  like he could be prior military because he knows how to use his weapon, but he’s just

  too fast. I can’t think of any other way to explain it. He shouldn’t be moving with

  that much ease.”

  “Definitely interesting.” The Lieutenant watched the two try to keep the converging

  zombies at bay. “We got anything that can help them?”

  “We’re low on everything, sir. Plus, we’d like to save a little for the ride home

  in case we encounter any trouble ourselves.”

  “Hate to see them fall now. I can’t imagine they’ll make it, though.” He put down

  his glasses as zombies broke over every part of the truck bed. The two men left were

  now fighting back to back.

  ***

  “Odds?” I asked when Tommy’s back met mine.

  “Odds? As in the chances we’ll make it?”

  “Yeah.”

  “You want to know what odds I would be giving on whether or not we survive? That’s

  kind of inappropriate,” he said.

  “Not as much as mirrors on shoes.”

  “Please tell me you haven’t done that.”

  “No,” I told him. “I could never get the angle right and the glue wouldn’t hold. Plus,

  I mean, unless you tack on some good-sized pieces of reflective glass, what are you

  really going to be able to see?”

  The mounted thirty cal in the helo opened up again, but it was blowing zombies away

  too far from us to be of any immediate help. The basket finally made its way down

  to us. Unfortunately it was a good five feet and half a dozen zombies from our present

  location. It would be a life or death struggle just to get there.

  Tommy had a much better weapon for the close-quarter combat we now found ourselves

  in, and unlike me, he looked like he had another couple of hours left in him. It was

  get
ting to the point where I could barely drive my blade through the skull plate anymore.

  It was much more jarring to the arms than one might imagine. I was slogging through

  the bodies of two dead zombies by the time I reached the basket. Tommy was inches

  from me; the basket began its ascent.

  “Going up, lingerie, jewelry, perfume,” I told him, hoping that the levity would break

  the spell of despair I was feeling even in the midst of a rescue.

  Tommy jumped easily enough, the basket swaying drunkenly. He kicked out a few times,

  taking out some of the more rambunctious zombies that appeared to want to go for an

  aerial joyride themselves. We were about halfway up; the operator was guiding the

  cable onto the winch. I don’t know what it was, but something didn’t seem right, another

  crewman kept looking out over at us, but none of my family. I at least expected Trip

  to wave or something, or for Tracy to make sure I made it safely on board. I could

  only reason that they’d been made to strap themselves in and were telling them about

  our progress. I still didn’t see that working on Tracy…or Trip for that matter.

  We were three-quarters up as that second crewman peeked out again. Tommy looked over

  at me, I shrugged. He didn’t appear to like my response. Hands reached out and grabbed

  me just as the basket was coming even with the skids of the helicopter. My eyes immediately

  went to BT as I stood and was being helped in. The big man was passed out on a stretcher.

  That was not a shock. It was when I panned around and noticed that everyone was passed

  out. I instinctively pulled back.

  “Michael Talbot?” the man asked.

  “Uh…yeah,” I answered, still looking at my entire family.

  It was then that the second crewman came up by my side. I felt rather than saw the

  prick of a needle going deep into my neck. I reached out and grabbed his windpipe,

  slowly constricting his airflow as I applied more pressure.

  “What’s going on here?” I asked. Whatever he had hit me with was already beginning

  to take effect as his image blurred and multiplied. All three of him were rapidly

  turning red as I kept squeezing.

  I felt another needle on the side from the man that was working the cable. Tommy and

  the basket were just coming even with the opening to the craft. He saw as the second

  needle plunged into my neck and I would imagine, the status of everyone. His face

  twisted into a mask of anger as he grabbed the man that hit me the second time. He

  picked him up and threw him hard against the cockpit wall. The man slumped down. Two

  others that looked like Marines trained their weapons on Tommy. Before either of them

  could react Tommy hit the release on the basket; cable spun freely as he and the sled

  plummeted to the ground.

  “Grab him!” someone shouted.

  I thought they were talking about Tommy until I felt hands roughly grasp my arms and

  shoulders, dragging me the rest of the way into the helicopter before I rolled out

  and down. I was unconscious before I felt the hands leave me.

  ***

  Lieutenant Barnes watched as the basket and the young man fell from the helicopter.

  “Dipshit air jockeys,” he said as his heart skipped a beat. It was always difficult

  to watch someone die, and the more he saw, the worse it got. “Can’t even pull off

  a simple rescue mission without killing someone. Alright, Godson, get everyone on

  the same page. We’re out of here.”

  “We going to see if the kid is alright?” Godson asked.

  “He just fell a hundred feet out of a helicopter into the waiting arms of several

  hundred zombies. I’m going to say the outcome is predetermined on this one. Let’s

  saddle up and get out of here.”

  Barnes’ radio crackled and came to life. “Pounder Four, Pounder Four, this is Wing

  Six, standby for orders.”

  “Shit, looks like we’re going in after all,” Barnes said.

  “Pounder Four, this is Captain Emery. Do you still have an RPG?” he asked.

  “Hello, Captain, this is Lieutenant Barnes, we’ve got one round left. You want us

  to go in and save the boy?”

  “Negative, Lieutenant, I want you to put a round into that truck.”

  Barnes didn’t say anything. He couldn’t figure out the reasoning for the action.

  “You still there, Lieutenant?”

  “Uh…yes, sir, I think our last communication got garbled. I thought you said to light

  up the truck.”

  “You heard right. Put a round in the truck…now.”

  Godson was looking over at Barnes, he mouthed ‘Why?’

  “Lieutenant, put a round in that truck now or we will fire on your position.”

  “How about I just put the round in your ass,” Barnes shot back. “Be a lot easier for

  me to hit a nice easy non-moving target like yourselves with a rocket.”

  “We’ll talk when you get back,” the captain said. The helicopter rose a little more

  and got to the side of the plow. Thirty caliber machine gun rounds plowed into the

  truck, shredding everything in and around it. By the time the gas tank was struck

  and ignited, nothing was living in a ten-foot perimeter of the DPW truck.

  “Should I shoot him down?” Godson asked. He had grabbed the RPG and had it by his

  side.

  “Normally I’d say yes, but he has all those civilians onboard. Just because Emery

  is an asshole doesn’t mean they deserve to die.”

  A plume of flame erupted from the truck. The helicopter turned and the gunner was

  now pointing in the lieutenant’s direction.

  Godson shoulder mounted the tube and flipped the safety off.

  “One damn round comes this way, blow that motherfucker out of the sky,” the lieutenant

  said.

  “With pleasure, sir.”

  Godson centered the helicopter in his sights. The last time he’d had such an easy

  flying target had been on the practice range a few years back. The copter would never

  be able to maneuver fast enough to get away from the rocket-propelled grenade. He’d

  feel slightly bad for the civvies, but they were nameless, faceless people to him

  right now. Tough to have nightmares about people you didn’t even know.

  The helicopter abruptly veered to the left and made a hasty departure.

  “Ought to be a fun night on the base tonight,” Barnes said. “Alright, let’s try this

  again, round everyone up and let’s get the hell out of here.”

  “I could still take them out,” Godson replied.

  Barnes thought about it for a moment. In the fog of war, all sorts of stuff went down

  that was never explained, and not too many people would miss Emery.

  “As tempting as that sounds, I’d rather break that aristocratic nose of his with my

  fist instead.”

  Godson put the weapon on safe and quickly put it away without any more thought to

  the fact that he had his finger on the trigger of twelve human lives, and more importantly—in

  his opinion—one dog.

  ***

  My head was splitting when I awoke. A harsh light from the ceiling shone down and,

  of course, directly into my eyes. I sat up slowly knowing to do it any faster would

  cause a serious case of vertigo. Sometimes it was alright to be a little older; at

  least I knew the limitations of my body.

  “Tommy!?” I called out, sitting bolt upright quickly despite t
he pain. Last I had