Wednesday, June 22, 2016

The Patriot Plan (Chapter 2)




Chapter 2:
Is The Doctor In?



I was sitting by the fire in my torn clothes, greasy and dirty from going unwashed for so long. I looked around the area. Across from me were the two Hyenas that escaped with us. Their names were Dave and Chuck. They had become vital in showing us the way to the Hyena outposts. We started in St. Clair, Michigan and our goal was an outpost located in Abbott, Texas. It was a long shot but it was our only chance of survival.
The government gained some of its strength back and had been using drones to destroy the Hyena outposts all throughout the country. Texas and a few other southern states were the only ones I'd be welcomed in. The Hyenas resorted to burrowing underground once again, making it  harder to find them. We couldn't stay long when we did find them, though. Many of the outposts we actually made it to were destroyed a week or so after we left. It wasn't safe for our kind anymore.
The worst part of all of it was knowing I didn't even believe in the cause. I was being hunted down for something I didn't want to be a part of. The worst part was putting Levi at risk because I was too scared to go it alone. I traded a false sense of security for our livelihoods.
“Y'know, after we make it to the next outpost, there won't be another for a long time,” Chuck said to me. “Do you think you're ready for that?”
“We won't have any ammo or food,” Dave said to back up Chuck.
“I don't know.” I was becoming uncertain about everything. I couldn’t protect Levi. I couldn’t even protect myself. “I wish I knew. We have food right now. We're already running low on ammo but Levi found the bow he's been using to hunt.”
“That won't take down a drone.” Chuck laughed a little, most likely out of annoyance.
“But your gun can?” I raised a skeptical eyebrow. “You do a lot of talking for someone who doesn’t have a plan either.”
“Alright, guys, that's enough,” Dave butted in.
“Look, we are fine,” I asserted. “And you have no right to talk to me like that.” I held onto my false sense of leadership for the roadtrip.
“I know you're not the real Marley.” Chuck furrowed his brow and shot me a daring glance. “Even if you were, it wouldn't make a difference. You're just a prick that can't lead and can't fight.”
“You'd all be dead if it weren't for me,” I snared.
“He's got a point,” Dave said in support of me.
Levi came up quietly from behind a tree with a row of rabbits he had caught. He held his bow tightly. Wrinkles formed under his eyes, his hair hanging low and covering his ears and cheeks.
“What were we discussing now?” Levi asked. “Politics?”
“Something like that,” Chuck replied.
Chuck didn't normally act so aggressive. It was most likely his hunger that was getting to him. It was getting to all of us. Hostility was reigning when hunger took over. Luckily Levi had managed to bag some rabbits for dinner. It didn’t help either that the air was getting colder. I was beginning to see my breath in the air, and the leaves began to change. We had to adapt to the changing climate. The Hyena outposts we passed had supplied us with warmer jackets, gloves, and hats. The cold of winter was still a few weeks away. We prayed we'd be somewhere warmer when it came. We still had hope and that kept us going.
I got up and walked the perimeter. Upon seeing Levi's footprints farther out, I realized there was a second set of footprints. Fear set in and I raced back to camp.
“Levi!” I yelled.
“What's going on?” Levi asked.
“Were you followed back here?”
“No. Why do you ask?” Levi said, his head tilted and his eyes narrowing.
“There was another set of footprints next to yours. We need to keep moving,” I said dramatically.
“I just finished building this fire,” Chuck charged angrily.
“And now you'll have to start putting it out,” I barked back. The urgency in my voice must have been apparent, because he immediately went to work smothering the flames. Either that, or he knew I was right.
“I'm gonna have to agree with Dustin on this one,” Dave said. “I don't want to die today.”
“There's a town close by on the map,” I said. “We can go there and see if we can find a spot to spend the night.”
It was decided unanimously that we head out for the town. Chuck wasn't happy about it but he knew it was for the best, therefore, he agreed with us. Most of the walk was in silence. We were getting tired and weak. We walked most hours of the day. We walked every day. It was starting to take its toll. I looked at Levi as his head started to weave and bob. He collapsed a moment later.
“Levi, can you hear me?” I asked.
“He'll be fine,” Chuck said. “He's probably just dehydrated.”
“Do we have much water left?” Dave asked.
“Down to three and a half bottles. Give him one,” Chuck demanded furiously. He swiped the bottle from Dave’s hand. He was becoming defensive over my brother.
Levi was still awake, but appeared disoriented. His eyes looked around the area but he didn't appear to know where he was. I put my hand out for Chuck to give me the water bottle. After a moment of consideration, he finally put the bottle in my hand. I told Levi what I would be doing so I wouldn't alarm him. I then sat him up and put the top of the bottle in his mouth.
“You're gonna be alright, buddy,” I said to Levi.
He started to come to and looked at me with knowing eyes.
“What happened?” Levi asked,
“You passed out,” Chuck said laughing.
Levi always seemed to cheer Chuck up. I wasn't sure why, and I was afraid to ask.
“Let's get going,” Dave said.
I helped Levi to his feet and he held onto the water bottle tightly for the rest of the journey into town. We came over a hill and found what we were looking for. The town was sitting quietly and was smaller than I imagined. Most of it had been cut off from the center which was barricaded. The only way in was through the middle of town. It looked like someone made it so whoever entered would have to funnel in through the narrow passage.
The sun was setting in front of us and we knew time was short. We had to get in there and set up camp quickly. First, we had to secure the area. This meant making sure it was safe to stay in.
“I don't like this,” Chuck said.
“I know. Do you have any other ideas?” I asked, sincerely hoping he would.
“We're being followed. This is the safest place,” Dave said.
Chuck finally nodded, and our short discussion ended. We only had two options, anyway. Levi was looking down at the ground as we entered through the town square.
“Are you scared?” I asked him.
Looking offended, Levi quickly answered, “Of course not! I'm fine!”
“Alright, alright,” I said laughing uneasily. “Just checking on you.”
“I've killed lots of things,” Levi tried to reinforce his point.
“You've killed defenseless rabbits and woodchucks. They don't fight back. Don't get me wrong, you're a good shot, but you're not a killer,” I said.
“I could kill those soldiers, though,” Levi insisted silently.
“Don't talk like that,” I scolded. “Those soldiers are people, Levi. They have families just like all the people that lived at the camp with us.”
“They're trying to kill us,” Levi was upset, anger bled from his words.
“That's because the people we're with have taken everything they've ever known,” I replied.
“You almost killed them, though, Dustin. You wanted to. I could see in your eyes when they killed Jess,” Levi remarked.
I looked down to the ground. I was about to reply, but before I could there was a snap, and a whine of running rope. Dave smacked against the ground, and was lifted high into the air. He had broken a wire that activated some mechanism that hung up a few feet above us.
“Dave! You okay?” I screamed wildly. My heart started pounding. I surveyed the area briefly to see if there were more traps around.
“I'm fine! Just get me down!” Dave yelled back.
I looked at Chuck and Levi for ideas. They looked back at me, both looked just as confused. We had knives, but there was nothing close to Dave we could climb on to get to him.
“Guys, the blood is rushing to my head,” Dave said worriedly. He’s running out of time. We need to get to him. He can’t stay upside down like that or the blood rushing to his head will kill him. There’s nothing around here we can use to get him down.
“We're gonna get you down! We just need to brainstorm first!” I replied loudly. Dave is going to die. There’s nothing anywhere we can get our hands on that will help us. He knew I was bluffing when I said we would help him. He had to have known.
Suddenly, the rope broke and Dave fell. He landed on his head with a sickening thud, and the all-too-familiar sound of breaking bones. Chuck approached him cautiously. Dave was dead, his neck bent at an impossible angle, and Chuck looked back at us knowingly.
“We need to get out of this cursed town,” Chuck said to us.
“Agreed,” I replied.
I was terrified. There was no way to know what waited for us further in the town. I don’t think any one of us really wanted to know. If the rope death was the welcoming committee, what could possibly be beyond it?
“No! Look, the gate is closing!” Chuck yelled.
We all looked back the way we came in and the gate was indeed closing up our only exit. There was no escape. We had to dig in for the night. No way out. No, this can’t be right. I promised Levi I would protect him. A night in this town will surely kill of all of us. We’re not alone. We can’t be alone. Is that someone in the window?
“Which building looks safest to you guys?” I asked.
“No! I'm not spending the night in this place!” Chuck yelled madly.
“Hey!” I shouted to Chuck. “We don't know who's watching us and if they're listening or not right now. Why don't we get comfy and lie low?”
“No! I'm not gonna stand still and let this asshole kill all of us!” Chuck yelled back to me.
We were in the middle of town surrounded by tall buildings. Each building had numerous windows that someone could have taken a shot at us from. This realization put me on edge. Chuck was flailing wildly and waving his pistol in the air. I suddenly saw a glimmer from one of the windows and instinct kicked in. I tackled Chuck to the ground and narrowly avoided a round from a high-powered rifle. The sound was deafening, with its echo against the large buildings making it worse. Chuck threw me off of him and motioned for us to get into one of the buildings. The three of us ran frantically for a destroyed building with enough cover to keep us momentarily safe. A second round rang through the air that kicked up dust around our feet as we ran.
“You okay, Levi?” Chuck asked.
“Yeah, don't ask if I'm fine or anything. Not like I just saved your ass or anything,” I said in reply to Chuck.
“I'm okay,” Levi said.
“Good,” Chuck remarked to Levi. “But touch me again and you're dead, Dustin.”
“That guy's still out there,” I reported. “Do we have any plans?”
“I'm thinking!” Chuck said rabidly.
“There's no way out of here,” I asserted. “We have to take him head-on.” I was still looking around the area for ways out as I said that. As much as the reality of a looming fight was setting in, I still would have rather avoided it.
“We're down to fifty-six rounds of ammo for various weapons,” Chuck disclosed.
“We can work our way through the buildings to get to him,” Levi chimed in.
I said back: “Good thinking. Cover and flank.”
“We don't know how many there are of them,” Chuck stated.
“There can't be more than one,” I said back.
“What do you base that off of?” Chuck asked suspiciously.
The three of us were talking very rapidly. Our nerves had gotten the best of us. We were in a standoff that we weren't sure anyone could win. Our enemy clearly knew the environment well. He or she had already taken one life from our party. The buildings could have traps in them or could come down easily. They appeared to be all bombed-out during the last battle this town had seen.
“That's how many I want there to be,” I replied to Chuck viciously. I felt more determined than I should have.
“I'm giving Levi the pistol,” Chuck said to me.
“No!” I yelled angrily.
“Shut up! You're gonna give away our position!” Chuck hissed as quietly as he could.
“Why not, Dustin?! I've been shooting the bow!” Levi pleaded loudly.
“That's a lot different, Levi,” I tried to reason with him. “You're not killing anyone.”
“You need me for this,” Levi said to me. He had a determined look on his face that attempted to convey to me that he was ready. I wasn’t convinced.
“No, Chuck and I will handle this,” I said.
“The kid has a point. He needs the gun in case he runs into trouble,” Chuck remarked.
“I'll be there if he runs into trouble. He doesn't get a gun and that's final,” I said definitively. A bullet ricocheted off the wall in front of us. Whoever was taking aim at us was toying with us. He or she was attempting to draw us out. It got us jumpy and ready to move. Their plan was working.
“That's it!” Chuck yelled nervously. “I'm going for it! Cover me!”
“Chuck, no!” I shouted to him.
Chuck jumped over the wall and ran for the building adjacent to us as quickly as he could. He tripped but quickly regained his balance and continued running. From the time he jumped the wall to the time he made it to the other building, our adversary had shot two more rounds at him. I saw the glimmer of the scope and made note of it.
“You're welcome!” Chuck yelled from his new position. “Did you guys see him?”
“Yeah, he's in the far building to the east,” I replied.
“I'm making my way to him!” Chuck yelled.
I screeched back to him: “Alright, I'll cover you!”
“I need a gun,” Levi said to me, pulling at my shoulder gently.
“It's final, Levi. Stay with me and you won't need one.” I wasn’t ready to give in.
“I can help you guys.”
“No, Chuck and I have this under control. He's on his way to finish it up right now,” I said in response to Levi's concerns.
We waited a few moments until we heard a few gunshots and an eerie scratching sound. Levi and I turned to look at each other. He looked terrified. I knew it was time for me to step up. I looked up and scanned the area to see if the glimmer of the shooter's scope was visible. It wasn't, so I made a dash for the building Chuck ran into.
My heart was pounding and I was becoming tired more easily than usual. I knew my nerves were getting to me but I couldn't think straight. Time was moving more slowly. I ran through the building to where Chuck had gone. I made my way through an entrance where the door had been blown off. I was still trying to catch my breath.
I looked to the ground where Chuck was lying. His eyes were open and he appeared to be staring at me. It was unnerving but I continued on. I was more cautious now. It looked like Chuck had tripped some kind of trap like Dave did.
I kept walking and found my way into a room filled with jars that contained weirdly-colored fluids and body parts. There was a table that looked like it was used for surgeries in the center of the room. A body with both arms and one leg removed laid on the table.
Only a little light shone through the window so the room was almost completely dark and the objects in the room obscured. The quiet was chilling. Seeing the body forced me to stop moving; it made me think what would happen to Levi and I if we didn't make it out.
I was suddenly hit over the head with a blunt object. I hit the solid floor hard. The blood could be felt on the back of my head where I was hit. I was being dragged by my feet to the operating table.
“Shouldn't have come here,” a strange voice said. “I don't want to have to operate on you!”
My vision was hazy and I couldn't comprehend what was happening.
“They just can't learn to leave me alone!” the voice continued.
I was then lifted onto the table by the man who had set the traps. I looked on the wall and saw a doctor's certificate. I was lying next to a mutilated body and could barely move.
“They’re all sick and they need help!” he assured himself. “We have to operate on them for their own good!”
“What?” I said disoriented. “You- You're operating on who?! How many of you are there?!!”
“He talks to us!” the man said. What’s going on?! Is the doctor talking to himself or is there someone else in the room with us?
He had long, unkempt hair. His jacket was covered in mud and filth.
“Us?! Who's us?!” I yelled worriedly. I tried to get up, but my body ached. I couldn’t move.
He suddenly went into the corner and stood there for a moment. I attempted to move slowly, finally feeling a burst of energy surge through me, but he turned around quickly and hit me in the stomach with a baseball bat.
“You can't leave! We haven't had dinner yet!” he said frenetically.
“No, I'm not hungry. Thanks,” I said. I attempted to play his game with him. My mind was racing with possible escape plans or various dialogue options that could be used to get me out of the situation.
“We insist!” he said as he grabbed a dirty saw and approached me.
He put the saw to my arm and made a small cut. I yelled in pain and used my other hand to punch him in the stomach. This made him laugh. He then quickly punched me in the face. His hand was bleeding, his knuckle having hit my cheekbone. He laughed wildly at the sight of the blood.
“You can't do this!” I yelled to him.
“This one doesn't like the saw! What do we give him then, doctor?” he asked himself. “We just have to use a little more force!”
He grabbed my arm and pulled me off the table. Walking slowly back to his corner, he picked up an ax and approached me once again.
“No!” I yelled hectically.
He held out my left arm and knelt into my chest with his knee to keep me from moving. He gripped the ax tightly and lifted it into the air.
I then looked behind him and saw Levi holding a gun to him.
“Levi, shoot!” I screamed. What am I doing?! I can’t ask my little brother to shoot someone! But if I don’t then he’ll cut my arm off. It’s the right thing to do. It has to be.
He hesitated. The ax came down and in one excruciating moment, my arm was separated from the rest of my body. I yelled in agonizing pain. Another moment passed and the doctor looked pleased with his work.
The gunshot was loud and pierced the doctor's skull, pieces of it flying around and into me, causing small cuts. I was still writhing in pain on the now-bloodied floor. Levi was standing in the entrance, still holding the pistol up where he had taken the shot. He was paralyzed with the thought of what he had to do.
The blood loss mounted and shock set in. I closed my eyes and darkness ensued.



Monday, June 20, 2016

The Patriot Plan (Chapter 1)

By Max Masen






“Every generation needs a new revolution.”


-Thomas Jefferson


Chapter 1:
Is This What Thriving Looks Like?


I pushed back the flaps of the tent and found the community was sprawling, everyone moving intently in different directions. Mr. Bran held a bucket of water and dropped it on his growing crops. Jane, the teacher at our makeshift elementary school, stood outside the door and motioned for the children to come and join her inside.
The sun was high in the sky, shadows mere dots beneath our feet. I overslept. Jess approached me and slapped me on the back.
“What were you dreaming about?” she asked.
“Home, I think,” I replied.
“You are home, Dustin.”
“Sure, sure.” Seven years later and I still don’t feel like it’s home. But I’ll let her have it for now. It’s not like I’m going anywhere.
I lowered my gaze to the ground, my brow slightly furrowed. I had another dream about that night. I suppose it was more of a memory than a dream, yet a nightmare nonetheless. Every time I had the dream, our town was always crystal clear, and I could make out the look of the house perfectly. My parents were starting to disappear, though. They were in the dream but they were starting to grow fuzzier and fuzzier every time the dream occurred. I didn't want to lose them completely.
I saw Levi was in line over by the mess hall and walked over to him. The sun was out and the weather was near perfect; it wasn't too hot or too cold. Jess was clearly upset that I ignored her; she had that look in her eye that told me so. I wasn't mad at her though. I had actually grown pretty close to her during this time.
“Levi, what's the plans for the day?” I asked. I already know the answer.
“Y'know, I figured we'd go over the wall today and go about town. Maybe do some shopping and go-karting,” he said sarcastically. Yup, I guessed it. Maybe it's because his answer never changes from day to day.
I shifted my gaze to the metallic wall. It was built to keep us safe. Can it really do that though? It’s withered down to nothing in only a few years. It spanned the length of a small town and every Hyena outpost had one. Nobody was allowed in or out except for the Soldiers of the Revolution. Many of the outposts had been located underground early in the revolution. The government could easily bomb any settlements above ground so it was only logical to go where they couldn’t be reached.
“It gets funnier every time, Levi,” I said back.
“Dustin, this sucks.”
“I know, buddy, but we're safe. Seven years and still alive. That counts for something, right?” I asked rhetorically.
“I don't like Jess,” he stated bluntly. He didn’t look at me when he said it, knowing I would be upset.
“I know. You wear that very well.”
“I get bored in here, Dustin. There’s not a lot of kids left. They keep getting sick and have to leave.”
“I know,” I said sympathetically. “They're looking in the city for antibiotics. Everybody is gonna be fine soon.”
Living in close quarters with a shortage of doctors led to catastrophe. Many people were growing more and more ill and eventually died. We'd lost around twenty in the past two weeks. Jess was showing signs of the sickness but brushed off any remarks regarding her health.
“You better be right, Dustin. I don't want to live here anymore. This isn't living. This is just not dying.”
“That's more than a lot of people have right now,” I replied sternly. “They'd kill- literally- to be in the spot you're in right now. So get cozy. We're not going anywhere.”
“I didn't mean it like that. I just- I meant there's gotta be better things out there.”
“There's not, Levi,” I replied. “Outside of the walls there are hunters, raiders, madmen, cannibals, and all other sorts of horrible things. People that didn’t get to safety when this started… you can imagine how the past seven years would have changed them.”
“You just keep saying that to scare me.”
“No,” I said softly. “There's people outside of these walls doing anything in their power to stay alive right now and you're complaining because there are a shortage of kids to play with. Imagine what kind of shortages they’re dealing with!” I was quiet after saying that. I didn’t want to upset Levi, but I had to give it to him sternly. He had to know that I was not the bad guy, and neither was Jess. We were doing everything we could to keep him and everybody else safe.
“This is because of Jess, isn't it?” His tone was becoming more hostile.
“What do you mean?” I didn’t like playing oblivious, but sometimes I was too tired to do otherwise.
“Because you feel some kind of obligation to her instead of me.”
“You are the most important person to me, Levi. The only reason we're here is because of you. So stop picking fights and start thanking me for keeping you alive. I know none of this makes sense but it will when you're older,” I chastised him.
“You're not dad, Dustin.”
“Yeah, but I'm all you got so get used to it.”
A moment of silence passed and Levi looked down at the ground. He slowly raised his head to look me in the eyes.
“I'm sorry, Dustin. I just miss how things used to be, you know?” he asked softly.
“Trust me, I know. It's been years, though, and this is what we know now. Things get worse before they get better. That's what Jess told me seven years ago. I think we've already gotten through the worst of it. Things are finally going to get better. I know it's hard but we have to trust the leaders know what they're doing. Things might actually get back to how they used to be.”
I waited for him to answer, but he never did. I could see in his eyes that he was trying his hardest to think of a response, but he couldn't. He knew I was right. I was his older brother and no matter how smart he thought he was, I was always right.
“Now go get something to eat,” I demanded.
He turned to face the line again but he turned back suddenly to face me.
“Dustin, you're the most important person to me too,” he said.
“I know.”
I turned to face the rest of the community with the abundance of tents and makeshift homes. We had families living there. For the first time in years, we were finally starting to rebuild what once was. We were not well off but we had running water and a lot of food. That was enough. Also, we had each other.
These were people that seemed like your average townsfolk, but just a few months prior they were slaughtering the few government officials and army personnel that remained in the area. I held them in high regard, though, and had actually gotten to know many of them. I still couldn't get used to them calling me by their former leader's name, however. I just wanted to be able to tell them that Marley was dead and my name is Parker. I didn't feel that knowing their leader was dead would do anything to their cause now, anyway. After all, the war was seemingly won for the rebels. I kept up the charade for Jess.
I walked through the center of the town. I decided to talk to Jess again. She always knew what to do to keep me from getting too bored. She would be in the only building that served alcohol, the bar. It was a beat-up, rundown joint, but that’s how she liked it. A few nights back she got hit in the face pretty hard, left a shiner by her left eye. Still, she couldn’t get enough of it and so that's where I went. She was in her usual seat in the corner of the place. The building was dimly lit and had the feeling of a bar before the revolution started.
“Jess,” I called out.
“What do you want now? You're not gonna mouth off to me again, are you?” she asked jokingly.
“Right now, do you believe what you've done has made the country better?”
“We've gotten rid of the ultra-rich. We've killed or removed the ones who fell into the top one percent and watched the rest of us suffer and scramble for the money that was left over. I think that counts for something,” she explained.
“Making things worse for a few just to make a point doesn't mean things are better, though, Jess. Are the previous poor any richer? Everybody is living in shacks. Everybody.”
“Take a seat, Dustin.” She pointed to the seat adjacent to her. She had an unmoving expression on her face. Nothing I was going to say would change her opinion on what she had done.
I sat down and looked at her, waiting for a response to my previous question. She had no answer. She just looked back at me with a smirk on her face and a drink in her hand.
“Do you not like that we're friends? Is that what this is?” She raised her drink, looked into it, seemingly contemplating, before setting it back down.
“No, Jess. I've just been thinking a lot lately.”
“You think too much.”
“Somebody has to do it around here,” I replied. “The Hyenas don't even know what they're going to do with the country if they manage to take the new Capital and I'm the spokesperson.”
If we take the Capital?” she asked with an amused expression.
“Yes, Jess. If. Nothing is certain right now, is it? You don't even know if you'll last until the end of the week.”
“You shut up right now, Dustin.” She raised her voice. There was a frustration coming from her, evident from the bulging veins in her forehead. She didn’t think I could see them, but I always could. “Nothing is wrong with me. They're bringing back the medicine and I am going to be fine.”
“We need to look at the bigger picture. You're getting older, Jess, and you're the one who's in charge around here. What happens after you do go? Am I in charge? I don't feel as passionately about this as any of the rest of you do. I'm just here for the ride. I'm just here for you. But most importantly, I'm here for my brother.”
“I'm not going anywhere, Dustin. Remember that. Remember that I'm going to lead this country into the next era,” Jess said poignantly.
“Yeah, you're gonna lead this country.” I rolled my eyes. “Nobody even knows your name. They hang pictures of me all over the damn place but you'll be the one leading things.”
Things started to get heated between the two of us. The tension had been rising for a while. I started to question her too much and was pointing out her faults. She couldn't handle it. Her plan was poorly thought out and she was starting to fear that it would crumble from under her. The government was on its last legs for a while but was starting to bounce back. Its power was uncertain.
“Dustin, I-” she was cut off quickly as an explosion shook the entire town.
“We'll discuss this later,” I said sharply.
Jess reached for her pistol, which was resting in its holster. The man standing behind the counter was yelling to me. He threw me a shotgun and instructed me to hide.
“Listen to him,” Jess demanded of me.
“No, I need to find Levi!” I examined the area, looking for the exit. I knew where it was, but a sense of fear took hold of me and became dominant over my previous knowledge of escape.
“I'll find him. Just get to cover.”
Jess grabbed my shoulder but I threw her hand off. She tried to grab me but I threw her to the ground. I quickly ran out the door of the building and witnessed the drones flying overhead.
“Dustin, get down!” Jess yelled. “If you die, this is all for nothing!”
I ignored her and kept running. I was determined to find Levi. Nothing was going to get in my way. I can’t lose you, Levi. Not after everything else we’ve lost.
Bombs dropped and tents combusted, along with everything inside of them. There was nothing left of my tent when I reached it. My ears were ringing and soldiers in power armor were climbing the sides of the walls. The scraggly group of remaining Hyena soldiers attempted to hold them off but the government warriors pushed on and decimated the rebels on the wall. A line was drawn that the remainder of the rebels were holding. I used this to my advantage as I ran through the town looking for Levi.
There were about two hundred of the rebels living in the outpost. Within a few minutes, there was only a fraction of that.
“Hold the line!” one of the Hyenas yelled.
“I got one! I got one of them!” another yelled upon shooting a government soldier.
The military’s might, what was left of it that is, compensated for their lack of numbers by being crack shots and experts with any weapon.
The attack was coordinated. The government soldiers seemed to have been after something. It appeared as though they knew I was there. The Hyenas weren't trying overly hard to conceal my location, the war seemingly winding down and the government on its last legs.
I finally came upon Levi on the other side of town. He had been hiding under the remains of one of the makeshift brick homes. He was curled up in the fetal position and covering his ears. I grabbed his arm and he punched me in the face. He looked terrified and he clearly didn’t realize who I was. I wiggled my nose around, fearing that it was broken. The shock of the punch finally wore off and I leaned down again.
“Levi? It's me, buddy,” I said.
“Dustin?” He looked to me in shock. “We have to get out of here.”
“I'm trying.”
I grabbed his arm and pulled him up. We ran back the way I came to get him. We dodged bullets from soldiers and bombs that the drones were still dropping. Jess and a team of men came from the side and were making gestures indicating she wanted us to follow her. Her mouth was moving rapidly but the ringing from the bombs prevented any noise from entering my ears. We ran to her as quickly as we could.
“Jess, what's the plan?” I asked.
“Escape,” she replied. “That's all we can do. We're going to lose this outpost. The few men still holding the line will allow us the time we need to get out of here.”
“We're leaving them to die?” Levi asked.
“It's either that or we all die,” Jess responded.
“We don't have any other options.” I knew what I was doing. I was scared, but what I did was put myself above the other men that had used their lives to protect me. There was no getting past that fact.
Levi appeared confused. He looked at me as if I should have done something. There was nothing I could do, though. I knew I was disappointing him. He looked up to me and I was letting him down. He couldn't believe his brother would leave these people to die for us.
“Let's go, Dustin,” Jess ordered. “There's another outpost close by that we can evacuate to.”
We went into one of the buildings that was bombed out. There was a hidden door under a rug that we used to sneak underground into. I could still hear the battle raging above ground after we had exited. I heard men and women screaming in pain. The bullets were unrelenting and the death toll mounted.
“Were all those deaths necessary too, Jess?” I asked furiously.
“We didn't see it coming. We thought there was nothing left of the government. You can't get mad at me for this, Dustin. We had no idea about any of this,” Jess said defensively. “By all means, if you can find better out there, continue on by yourself.”
“I can get mad at you for this. You dragged me into this from the beginning. I'm the one responsible for all of this, because of you. Had I just exposed that I wasn't Marley, none of this would have happened. This is on you!” I yelled.
“Think what you want. Let's keep going, though. They'll be looking for us. Whether I like it or not, I still need you alive,” Jess said in response. She didn’t mean it, but she knew it would get to me.
We walked the length of the tunnel in silence. We finally saw light at the end. We cleared the rocks that led to the outside and walked out. The outside was beautiful. Plants, trees, and insects all around. The sounds of birds could be heard, a stark contrast to what we’ve been used to inside of the outpost.
“Get down!” a voice yelled.
We looked above and standing on top of the rocks were two government soldiers waiting for us. They had weapons trained on me, Jess, and the other Hyenas we snuck out with. I carefully raised my shotgun but one of the soldiers spotted me.
“Drop your weapons or we'll shoot!” the soldier yelled.
They were in the power armor that amplified their strength and resistance to bullets. Their faces were covered.
“It's Marley. Tell command we have a positive ID,” one of the soldiers said to the other.
“No, let's just kill him here,” the other suggested.
“Or we could forget about all of this and you guys could pretend you didn't see anything?” I said uneasily.
“I'm doing it,” the soldier said. “I'm ending this right now.”
He lifted his rifle to me and put his finger on the trigger.
“No!” Jess yelled.
Jess raised her pistol and loosened a cartridge, throwing the soldier backward. I raised my shotgun and blasted the other soldier in the chest, causing him to bounce back and fall to the ground. We knew the blasts from our weapons wouldn’t kill the soldiers; the power armor was far too resistant to be penetrated by a regular round from a pistol or a buckshot from a shotgun. The other soldier raised his rifle and shot Jess repeatedly before I could pump the shotgun and fire another round into the soldier that was still standing. He also fell to the ground and I walked up to the one that shot Jess. I ripped off his helmet and grabbed my knife. I looked to Levi, then to the knife. I gripped it tightly in my hand and then threw it away from me. The other soldier began getting up and limping away.
“Yeah, go ahead!” I yelled to the soldier who was in full retreat. “Run away!” My heart was beating too quickly, threatening to rip out of my chest. The second soldier got up, looked at me with wide, terrified eyes. “Get up!” I yelled to him. “Get out of here!” I reached for the shotgun as the soldier got up and ran to meet up with his friend. I shot a buckshot into the sky and screamed. Jess, I remembered. Jess is hurt.
I raced to Jess who was struggling to breathe.
“Jess,” I said faintly, “I'm... sorry.”
“Dustin, you were right.” Her eyes watered. Something about her face seemed… remorseful. The wrinkles lining her cheeks disappeared. “I was in over my head. You're in charge now. I trust that you'll make the right decisions for us. For all of us.”
“I never asked for this.” My eyes were filling up, my vision becoming blurred. I was angry, confused, and I felt more lost than I ever had before. Without Jess I didn’t know what to do, where to go, how to carry on.
“I know. And I'm sorry I put you in this position. What was that you always used to say?”
“The one thing that never changes. The only constant.”
“Yeah, that.”
“That I'm always with you.”
Jess smiled and I shot her a smile back. I tried not to look at the blood; I only looked at her smiling visage. But she suddenly lost her expression and her head rolled back. I got up to look at Levi and the two soldiers that accompanied us.
I lifted the shotgun up and aimed it at the sky and cocked my knee. “We got a long road ahead of us.”