“You look like shit.”
Cahz let out a short sigh. “Feel like shit, too. I think it’s the infect-”
“No way, man!” Ryan broke in. “It’s the blood loss from the dog bite. That’s all it is and you know it. We’ll get you back to that ship of yours and you’ll be fixed up just fine.”
Cahz pushed himself up from the edge of the desk. “Regardless of what it is, I used both the flares out there. We need to build a signal fire or none of us are going to that ship.”
“Okay,” Ryan said.
He stretched up and pulled down his grubby jeans. They were still damp to the touch but at least now they had been warmed by the fire.
“Cahz,” Ryan said. “Stick your pants on, at least.”
Cahz nodded and snatched down some of his clothes from the line.
“How do we do this?” Ryan asked as he gingerly pulled his trainers on.
“Grab everything we can that will burn.” Cahz wriggled into his still damp fatigues. “Lay it out in a cross at the edge of the playing field. Set it alight and wait.”
“How do we keep it dry enough to get it lit?”
Cahz looked puzzled for a moment before leaning back on the desk. The metal legs scraped across the floor at the pressure. He looked down at the table. He ran a hand over the smooth varnished top and gave it a firm pat like it was a family pet.
Outside, the rain was still pouring down and the undead cried out for the flesh they could see through the railings.
“How many more of these do we need?” Ryan puffed, his arms full of textbooks.
“That’ll do,” Cahz said as he spread out his own bundle of books.
Although it was pitch black, he knew the zombies had a bead on them. The fence rattled and creaked as they pushed against it, trying to break through. And even though the wind and rain did much to muffle the sound, their deathly moans were all too clear. Inside the school, with the crackling fire, neither Ryan nor Cahz had any idea of the sheer numbers of zombies accumulating beyond the fence, their moans softened by the elements and the illusion of safety.
Although Cahz couldn’t see the enemy in the enveloping darkness, he sensed their vast numbers.
He pulled out the book of matches from their MRE and looked into the darkness.
“Shouldn’t we wait until we hear the chopper?” Ryan asked.
Cahz paused for a moment, thinking it through, and looked at the half empty book of matches.
“Visibility is low. By the time we light it, he could have flown past.”
Cahz struck the match and held it to a corner of the paper. The flame spluttered and hissed before popping out, leaving a warm ember and a thread of smoke. Cahz tried again and before the scorched paper could ignite, the match had fizzled out.
“Too damn wet!” Cahz snapped.
He shifted round on his haunches to try and block the worst of the rain.
“Aw.” Cahz winced as something hard and sharp dug into his thigh.
“You okay?” Ryan asked.
Cahz dipped his hand into his thigh pocket and pulled out the curved magazine. It was the spare Angel had passed to him this morning. He felt the cold metal magazine in his hand and remembered the woman’s stern warning to return the empties. It seemed like a lifetime since he’d seen her, since becoming exiled in this forsaken land.
Cahz teased the top round and flipped out it out. He pulled out his knife and plucked out the bullet that sat snugly in the case. It was too dark to see the cordite underneath, but Cahz knew it was there.
Cupping a hand round the open page of the schoolbook, he poured the powder into the crease of the spine. He ripped a page from an adjacent book and screwed it into a ball.
Cautiously, he lit the second to last match and introduced it to the small heap. The ammunition flared into life and a thick flame lapped up the side of the scrunched-up paper. He balled up more paper and nurtured the growing blaze.
“Keep fuelling this fire. Don’t let it go out.”
Ryan looked concerned. “Where are you going?”
“To get more shit to burn,” Cahz called back as he ran to the school building.
Copying Cahz, Ryan added a steady supply of balled up paper. The blaze spread quickly, its light and heat growing in intensity. As the flames took hold, the darkness was pushed further and further.
Ryan looked up at the rain clouds, praying to see the flash of the helicopter lights. There was nothing. Dejected, he lowered his eyes. As he did he saw the horde of undead at the fence. Their cyanotic faces snarling, their palsied arms forced between the slats, their fingers stretched out, grasping for their prey. Ryan stared, mesmerized by the forest of dead arms. For as far as the light extended, all he could see were hundreds of arms waving and clawing, desperate to seize him and devour his flesh.
Cahz’s voice broke Ryan from his daze. “Lend a hand,” he said from behind a massive bookcase teetering precariously across his shoulders.
“Sure,” Ryan said, glad for the distraction.
He grabbed the swaying end of the bookcase and helped Cahz extract himself from under it. Cahz turned as if to leave, but instead of running off he delivered a brutal side kick to the shelving. The wood cracked and snapped under his powerful and accurately placed kicks.
“Add some of these bits,” Cahz said, tossing over a broken shelf. “The wood will burn longer.”
Ryan swept up an armful of lumber and went back to diligently stoking the flames.
Cahz delivered a brutal kick to the last intact length of shelving. “Listen, I’m off to get some more. You keep at the fire.”
“How’s Rebecca?” Ryan asked as he angled the wood over the fire.
“I don’t know,” Cahz confessed.
“Oh for god’s sake, Cahz. Why didn’t you check in on her and make sure she’s still safe?”
“She’s sound asleep,” Cahz argued. “She’ll be fine.”
Ryan looked up at Cahz, his face framed by the glow of the fire.
“You didn’t know that. You’ve just told me you haven’t checked in on her. Look, just check in on her on the way past.”
“Okay,” Cahz replied, and jogged off.
Ryan watched the soldier as he ran into the school.
“For fuck’s sake, it’s like it’s too much to ask,” he moaned as he grabbed a handful of smashed shelving.
As he stood back up, Ryan froze. The zombie marched straight at him, battering into the table that separated them. Carried forward by its momentum and unable to brace itself on stiff limbs, the dumb creature toppled over.
Ryan dropped the splinters and went for his pistol.
But it wasn’t there. His mind flashed to the gun sitting with the body armour and the bag of cans.
“Cahz?!” Ryan called, but there was no reply.
He turned to run for the school and then he heard it. Through the rain and the moans came the sweeping sound of helicopter blades.
By the time he’d ran to retrieve his gun, Ryan knew their rescue would have passed them by.
“Cahz!” he hollered at the school.
He turned and lunged at the fallen zombie. The decaying creature was struggling to its feet when a pair of warm hands grabbed it.
Fuelled by rage, Ryan picked up the animated corpse and threw it back over the tables. Ignoring where it landed, Ryan started tipping over the desks acting as an umbrella. The fire hissed and spat as the raindrops evaporated in its heat. But already the pyre was beginning to wane. The section Ryan had lit first was close to consuming the last scraps of paper.