THE RAID

  An EDEN Short Story

  By

  Keary Taylor

  Copyright © 2013 Keary Taylor

  All rights reserved. Except as permitted under the U.S. Copyright act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without prior written permission of the author.

  First Digital Edition: February 2013

  The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.

  Taylor, Keary, 1987-

  The Raid : a short story / by Keary Taylor. – 1st ed.

  Also by Keary Taylor

  THE EDEN TRILOGY

  The Ashes: An Eden Prequel

  The Bane: Book One

  FALL OF ANGELS

  Branded

  Forsaken

  Vindicated

  Afterlife: the novelette companion to Vindicated

  WHAT I DIDN’T SAY

  I exhaled slowly, creating small, wispy clouds as we moved silently through the still evening. Dew collected under my fingers, freezing my hands to my shotgun. The cold of March crept down my neck, wrapping around my body, and sinking into my skin.

  I glanced at my companions when we stopped at the tree line. They were tired and cold after traveling the last two days, one of which snow fell from the sky. Despite the danger that lay before them, they were determined, focused. They looked back at me. Bill, Graye, and Tye – my brothers in arms.

  We were the elite defenders of Eden.

  And this was a raid.

  We waited as the last traces of light disappeared from the horizon. The stars fazed into the sky and the moon rose over the city, washing it in pale gray light.

  The darkness brought safety in an unsafe world.

  “Let’s go,” Tye whispered as he stepped from his hiding place toward the road.

  Our feet moved silently, our firearms held at the ready. The dark road stretched before us, illuminated by the flashlights Tye and Graye pointed into the night. The concrete was broken and cracked. Patches of green spread across its dark surface, nature reclaiming what was rightfully its.

  There were abandoned cars everywhere. Some parked on the side of the road, some sitting in the middle of the street, the doors hanging open and the keys still in the ignition. The buildings around us started to crumble. And animals that at one time stuck to the mountains out of fear of humans prowled the alleys and wild backyards.

  The four of us had been on dozens of raids together before. We moved as a well-trained team, aware of one another’s movements, able to communicate without words. These were my comrades, my fellow soldiers.

  I may have only been a seventeen-year-old girl, but they still respected me. I was one of them.

  Tye walked at the forefront of us, his rifle sweeping with his eyes. Eyes that were deadly accurate. Tye never missed a target.

  “You need to stay focused on the next shot,” he’d told me once when I was thirteen. He adjusted my hands on the rifle and scooted my feet into the right position with his own boots. “If you keep that bad shot in your head, your focus won’t be where it needs to be and you’re probably going to miss the next one too.”

  With his teaching, as well as Bill’s, I almost never missed these days.

  We were in most dire need of ammunition. It was one of the only things we couldn’t create ourselves, and one thing that was absolutely necessary for our survival. You couldn’t forage bullets in the mountains where the colony survived. With one outdoors store in the city, and one general-carries-everything-you-need store that had ammunition, we headed for the outdoors store.

  We came around the back of the familiar building. Tye quickly passed the beam of light through the windows, and found the store empty. Pushing open the glass door we had broken years ago, Tye, Bill, and myself stepped inside while Graye kept watch at the door.

  Since we walked into and out of the city on foot, we were extremely limited in what we could take on each raid. We could only carry so much in our packs. That was the reason we had to go on raids nearly once a month. Our minimal supplies could only last so long, and so we had to go back into danger time and time again.

  “I’ll load you up first,” Tye said to me as he started picking up shotgun shells from a shelf. The stack was getting smaller and smaller. We’d go through the entire supply before fall came.

  I nodded and turned. My pack jerked as he pulled the zipper open and then sagged toward the ground when he started loading it.

  “Here,” I said, reaching for the packs of socks on a rack right in front of me. They were thick. Hiking socks. Socks for the end of the world. “Put these in too.” I handed back six packs to Tye.

  When my pack was loaded as heavy as it could take without ripping, Tye zipped me up, and I went back outside to keep guard with Graye. Bill and Tye continued to load up on more ammunition, heavy duty boots, and bug repellant.

  “I’ve got a bad feeling about tonight,” Graye said in a low voice, more frosty air billowing out of his lips.

  “We’ll be fine,” I said, my eyes scanning the alley behind the building. “We know how to be careful.”

  Graye’s eyes fell to the ground and he shifted his weight from one foot to the other. “Yeah.”

  “Let’s go,” Tye said as he and Bill stepped outside.

  We jogged between shops, heading for a building two blocks away. Tye and I took the lead, Bill and Gray watching our backs as we traveled. I tried to ignore the dried blood splattered on the brick walls and the casings that littered the ground. How long ago had those lives been lost? When the world started to go crazy? Just last year?

  Something clattered on the rooftop right above us and we all scattered. Bill and Graye backed up the direction we had come, their firearms out. Tye and I dashed further down the alleyway, our own shotguns pointed at the roofline.

  Metal met metal in a horrible screech, but whatever it was stayed out of view. Tye tugged on the back of my pack, in the direction of a ladder that led up into the mess of a building that was only half built. We silently ascended, being cautious not to fall. Tye and I pulled ourselves into the exposed rafters of what should have become the first floor ceiling and the second story floor.

  Just as we positioned ourselves behind a curtain of shredded and hanging plastic, we heard a body hit the concrete of the road. A moment later, there were dragging, grating footsteps.

  I glanced up at Tye through the dim light, questions in my eyes. I wanted to ask what was going on. They weren’t supposed to be awake at night. But his eyes darkened and he pressed a finger against his lips for silence.

  The dragging footsteps grew closer. My heart pounded in my chest, my grip tightening around my shotgun. My finger sat poised on the trigger.

  It finally rounded the corner, stepping into the moonlight that spilled into the building. Its eyes were dead and empty as it searched the building for life. Its head swept from the left side of the building to the right. It hadn’t seen us, but there was some indication that told it there was something inside.

  It stepped fully inside the wide, crumbled opening of the building and I saw the reason for that dragging, grinding sound. Its left leg was bent at an impossible angle, being mostly dragged and not supporting much weight. It must have broken it when it jumped from the roof of the building in the alley. Its right leg had no flesh to cover its metal bones and they clanked against the concrete floor.

  I leveled my sight on it, but just before I could pull the trigger, a careful hand was on my arm. Tye looked at me with serious eyes that screamed stop. He sh
ook his head.

  Before I could try to ask him why with my eyes, the thing below us froze. Even I could tell it was listening.

  A few moments later, it continued across the expansive room, dragging its dead and broken leg behind it. It disappeared into the dark of the building.

  Neither of us dared move. For all we knew it could have frozen just on the other side of the dark and was listening for us.

  All we could do was wait in the dark. Wait for it to try and kill us. Wait for it to make a move. Wait for the sun to come up and make a run for it.

  Something shifted in my pocket and I felt it just a moment too late.

  A shotgun shell slipped out and fell to the concrete floor with a soft ping, ping, ping.

  Tye and I both fired into the dark, the sound of the shots echoing in the empty space in a disorienting and deafening way. As our shots illuminated the dark, I saw it, lurching through the building in our direction.

  In a move I’d never seen before, the figure in the dim light lifted a hammer and hurled in our direction. It caught Tye’s shoulder and time seemed to slow as I watched him fall backward into the dark.

  Out of shells, I pulled my handgun from my belt as I leapt out of the beams toward the enemy in the dark.

  One, two, three, four shots I fired and finally, I heard a body crash to the floor with a scraping of metal.

  “You okay?” I asked in the dark. We were plunged in darkness the moment I stopped firing. I didn’t lower my weapon though.

  “Yeah,” Tye groaned and suddenly a beam of light danced on the ceiling when he clicked the flashlight on. He climbed to his feet, favoring his back. I saw pain in his face as he searched the room for the body.

  It was lying not seven feet from me. It laid prone, that broken leg sticking out at a grotesque angle.

  Tye came to my side, pointing the flashlight directly at it. The light reflected back at us off of its gleaming metal skull. The skin that should have been on its hands was completely gone and it looked as if someone had clawed the flesh off its back. A grimy, silver spine rose in bumps and valleys and ribs held in ticking, pulsing organs. A few seconds later, they stopped and the body was completely still.

  “What was it doing out?” Tye asked, wincing as he shifted his pack back into place.

  “They’re not supposed to come out at night,” I said, shaking my head. “That’s the most cut and clear rule when it comes to the Bane.”

  “There isn’t much that’s cut and clear about our world anymore,” Tye said with weight in his voice.

  “What the hell?” Graye suddenly burst through the open doorway, his rifle held at the ready. Bill followed him half a second later. “What was that thing doing awake?”

  “You’re going to wake more of them up if you don’t tone it down,” I said, fixing him with a severe stare.

  “Sorry,” he said, his volume instantly dropping. “But seriously, what was it doing out?”

  “I don’t know,” Tye whispered, quieter than was probably necessary. “But I think we’d better speed things up.”

  We didn’t jog anymore when we got back to the alley. We sprinted.

  Graye was puffing by the time we stopped at the back of the clinic. Pulling the window up, Tye, Graye, and I squeezed inside while Bill took watch.

  The building had always been hit and miss in the past. Sometimes its halls were lined with sleeping, inactive bodies, sometimes it was clear. We were finally catching a break that day. It was empty.

  Tye stuffed Graye’s pack full of latex gloves, antibiotics, hand sanitizer, and a dozen other things I didn’t even have names for.

  We were out of there in less than two minutes.

  Our last stop was the general store.

  And it was the most dangerous one of all. There were several hundred Bane standing inside, silent, and empty. Unaware of the destroyed world just outside. Just how they were supposed to be at night.

  Knowing it was stupid to split up, we moved as a soundless group through the aisles. Our first stop was for basic needs: toothpaste, soap, girl things. Our packs were starting to bulge.

  The last thing we needed before we could go home was clothing. We weren’t animal enough just yet to run around naked, but going shirt shopping wasn’t the safest activity. The entire clothing department was filled with Bane. They stood between racks, in aisles, almost like they were going for a leisurely shop when the machine inside them made them stop caring about everything.

  I stepped between two of them, watching their eyes to make sure neither of them would wake, being even more careful to not let my skin brush theirs.

  Because one touch was all it took.

  One touch to steal your humanity.

  I winced every time a hanger made a noise as I pulled an item of clothing off. But none of them turned, none of them woke. The rest of my crew worked quickly as well, grabbing essential items: pants, shirts, jackets.

  When our arms were loaded, we carefully stepped back into the wide aisle, watching the Bane as we retreated toward the front doors. We were careful not to trip over the debris that lined the floors. Looters less careful and less alive than us had torn the merchandise from shelves years ago.

  Tye, then Bill, then Graye step out of the building and I was just about to leave when I heard something behind me.

  It was quiet, just the shuffling of feet.

  I turned, and saw what was once a little girl, staring emptily at me. Her metallic eyes shone in the dark. Her hair hung around her face in limp strings. She wore a pink frilly skirt that was covered in grime.

  She couldn’t have been more than five.

  The flesh on her jaw had decayed or been ripped away, exposing her teeth and wires that ran from her neck up into her head.

  My first instinct was to shoot her. She may have been small but she was just as deadly as those full grown Bane behind her.

  But if I did shoot, it could possibly wake more of them.

  So I took one step away from her, out of the building. At first I had thought she must have gone back into inactivity mode.

  But then she blinked.

  I aimed my shotgun more accurately at her head, and backed away faster.

  Little had I realized that the mechanical girl in front of me was the least of my worries.

  A blinding light suddenly illuminated the concrete at my feet and I turned with my shotgun ready. The four of us were engulfed in a huge beam of light, and we were deafened by the sound of the helicopter circling us from above.

  “RUN!” Tye screamed.

  Don’t miss

  THE BANE

  Book One in

  THE EDEN TRILOGY

  AVAILABLE MARCH 5, 2013

  Before the Evolution there was TorBane: technology that infused human DNA with cybernetic matter. It had the ability to grow new organs and limbs, to heal the world. Until it evolved out of control and spread like the common cold. The machine took over, the soul vanished, and the Bane were born. The Bane won't stop until every last person has been infected. With less than two percent of the human population left, mankind is on the brink of extinction.

  Eve knows the stories of the Evolution, the time before she wandered into the colony of Eden, unable to recall anything but her name. But she doesn't need memories to know this world is her reality. This is a world that is quickly losing its humanity, one Bane at a time.

  Fighting to keep one of the last remaining human colonies alive, Eve finds herself torn between her dedication to the colony, and the discovery of love. There is Avian and West – one a soldier, one a keeper of secrets. And in the end, Eve will make a choice that will change the future of mankind.

  The Bane is The Terminator meets The Walking Dead with a heart-twisting romance.

  Table of Contents

  Copyright

  Also by Keary Taylor

  The Raid: an Eden short story

 


 

  Keary Taylor, The Raid: an Eden short story

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