“I
think this is what the ancients would call a score,” Todd Bolin
said to himself, hands on his hips, battered military field coat
crusted with crystalline snow. He could see his own shadow stretching
toward the object of his quest, cast by the bright sunlight behind
him through the open door of the city's utility garage. “I think I
will call you Joy. Joy Rider.”
Ms Rider, Joy to her friends, sat alone in the middle of the garage, other machinery farther in the shadows or in other bays. She was bulky and powerful, taller by half again at least than Todd's own six foot four height. The plow on her front gleamed in the sunlight, beneath a light blanket of dust.
“Really? The ancients? From, like, three months ago?” Tim Walter asked, edging into the garage, keeping his eye out behind them for zombies. Some might call them biters, or rioters, or red-eyes – he called them as he saw them. “Not even gonna comment on 'Joy Rider' as a name for a municipal snow plow.”
Ms Rider, Joy to her friends, sat alone in the middle of the garage, other machinery farther in the shadows or in other bays. She was bulky and powerful, taller by half again at least than Todd's own six foot four height. The plow on her front gleamed in the sunlight, beneath a light blanket of dust.
“Really? The ancients? From, like, three months ago?” Tim Walter asked, edging into the garage, keeping his eye out behind them for zombies. Some might call them biters, or rioters, or red-eyes – he called them as he saw them. “Not even gonna comment on 'Joy Rider' as a name for a municipal snow plow.”
“I
know, it's perfect,” Todd said. The younger man, slightly
shorter but many shades darker and several measures thinner, made a
sarcastic noise only half under his breath. “No, don't thank me.
Thank Joy.”
“Can
you start her up?” Tim asked.
“It's
not a question I get asked often,” Todd said. “My skill is renowned. But yeah, I think Joy and I can come to a mutually
beneficial agreement.”
They
swept the garage with their flashlights, finding nothing. The
building had been properly locked for some time before the Red Flu
Riots; there were few opportunities to use a snowplow in southern
Illinois in the late summer and early fall.
Tim
climbed into the passenger seat and watched as Todd pretended he was going to hotwire the
snowplow. With a flourish, Todd held up the keys, which had been barely hidden beneath the seat.
"Wow," Tim said.
Todd turned the key in the ignition and the plow made several coughing, grumbling noises and started up,
the engine unbearably loud in the small space. The young man
instinctively locked his door.
“Good
call, bad neighborhood these days,” Todd said.
“Can
you drive it?”
Todd
raised his eyebrows and stared at Tim. “Joy and I have come to a
mutually beneficial arrangement,” he said firmly.
“Time
to get back to the others?”
“We'll
go slow and make sure we're not gathering attention first. Keep an
eye out.” Todd pulled a small, ivory colored pendant out from
beneath his shirt and kissed it, then tucked it back in and put the
machine into drive.
He
pictured Eve Aubrey making the face she always made when she was
excited and joyful – hands clasped up beneath her beaming face,
sometimes accompanied by a little dance. She was always child-like
in unguarded happiness.
His
hand strayed to touch his Brigit pendant beneath the double layers of
tee-shirt under his sturdy coat.
They
pulled the plow up just outside the tall, fenced in lot where they'd
parked the motor homes. Inside the fence, a travel trailer, two motor homes, and a Ford F-750 tank of a truck hooked up to a
reinforced supply trailer formed a rough circle. A sandy-haired boy
no more than twelve years old came bolting pell-mell for the gate,
followed quickly by a teenage girl still young enough to keep her
bright red hair in stubby pigtails.
“I
got it, Ryan, chill out!” she hissed. “Go back to Marvie.”
“HI TODD! You're back!” Ryan shouted, grabbing the chain link with his hands with a clang. The men in the snowplow quickly looked around to make sure the boy's yelling wasn't bringing any hungry attention.
“HI TODD! You're back!” Ryan shouted, grabbing the chain link with his hands with a clang. The men in the snowplow quickly looked around to make sure the boy's yelling wasn't bringing any hungry attention.
“Ryan,
dammit,” Tim began, rolling the window down.
“Got
it,” Todd said, opening the driver's door and swinging out and down
to street level. “Hey, kid, good to see you again, it's been a
couple hours. So, Kirsten's going to open the gate, I need you to go
make sure Kolby and Galaxie are safetly contained. You know it's too
big a job to ask Marvie to do it by herself, and a man's gotta look
out for his people, right?”
Ryan
nodded importantly and bolted back toward the circle. Kirsten gave Todd about as
haggard a look as a fourteen year old could manage, clearly worn out from trying to keep Ryan and little Kolby occupied. The teenager
swung the gate open while Tim, now out of the vehicle, stood watch.
Todd climbed back in and pulled the plow inside the fence. The other
two locked it up behind them, everyone safe inside.
“Everyone”
was a grand total of seven folks and one tiny dog. One Todd Bolin,
traveler heading for the family he was separated from; one little old
lady, Marvelle Jones and her Yorkie mix, Galaxie; one toddler, Kolby
Dowling and his big sister Kirsten; one unmedicated preteen with
ADHD, Ryan Michael Crombey, who made a point of introducing himself
earnestly with all three of his names; two young men, both all that
remained of their own folks, Tim Walter and Lewis Pentillion. All
gathered up a couple at a time, except for the young men who joined the group one at a time, by Todd
after he'd left his parent's farmhouse to go back to Minnesota and
find – and protect – his family.
Lewis
stood on top of the supply trailer, shotgun at rest over his arm. He
gave the two returning men a nod, unlit cigarette dangling from the
corner of his mouth. Though it was chilly and icy snow frosted the
ground and buildings around them, Lewis wore only an AC/DC tee shirt
covered by an insulated flannel shirt, grubby jeans, and cowboy
boots.
“Ho,
the Mullet guard!” Todd saluted as he, Tim, and Kirsten passed back
into the circle of recreational vehicles.
“Hey,
smartass,” Lewis grumbled.
“That
mullet has grown more majestic in the time we've been gone,” Todd
said. “Any more majestic and a bald eagle's gonna land on your
head.”
“Fuckin'
right,” Lewis said. The cigarette moved to the other side of his
mouth. “All quiet here.”
“I
made chili,” Marvie said, poking at a kettle suspended above their
campfire, set in a small hole dug into the gravel of the parking lot.
The fenced in area they'd camped in for the last night had once been
a storage lot of some sort; the building attached had burned some
weeks ago. Enough of a wall stood yet on the fenced in side to offer
enough safety that young Ryan, baby Kolby, and dainty Galaxie could
be allowed some freedom to play inside the circle.
“It
smells heavenly,” Tim sighed. “Smells like home.”
“Smells
like Hoosier fucks,” Lewis said. “Smells like something that
might make them wanna climb a fence and have a bowl.”
“Lewis,”
Marvie chided, looking over her glasses at him, small brown face
disapproving. “They're not Hoosiers.” After pinning him with
her most stern face, she broke into a charming, naughty grin.
“They're not THAT bad. They just eat people.” She giggled,
covering her mouth. Galaxie danced around at her feet, delighted by
her owner's mirth.
“All
right, let's eat up fast and store the food for the night,” Todd
said, with a nod of agreement at Lewis. “If we have it put away by
the gloaming, less for the red-eyed people eaters to come looking
for.”
“Where's
the gloaming?” Ryan asked, confused. “Is it packed away?”
“For
the moment, kid,” Todd said, grinning. “Just for the moment.
“He
just means when it starts to get dark. Gloaming is a time, not a
place,” Tim said, exasperated.
“Says
you,” Todd said.
“Boys!”
Marvie said stoutly. “Let's eat, shall we? And plot out what we
mean to do tomorrow? Tim, you still got that map, right?”
“I
do, Miss Marvelle. Of course.”
“Well,
set down then. Let's eat. You heard me, Ryan Micheal Crombey.
Set.”
“I
think we'll leave my trailer behind,” Todd said, regretfully, as
they pored over the map much later in Marvie's motorhome. Kirsten
and Kolby were asleep on a pull out sofa against one wall and Ryan
was sleeping in a full sized bunk above the driver's area.
“Thank
goodness,” Tim said solemnly. “It's old, hideous, and not in
great shape.”
"Not all 'at different from Todd, actually," Lewis said.
“Yeah,”
Todd said, quietly, letting the insult pass untopped. Eve would have loved that motor home, though – turquoise,
chrome and white, still fitted with the vintage turquoise appliances
inside. He'd found it in a backyard as they'd driven past, him in
the Ford, Marvie and the kids in her Winnebago, and Tim and Lewis in
the Airstream, being pulled however improbably by the Winnebago. Todd had pulled the convoy to a halt so they could
investigate, then take, the motor home. Lewis had been happy to
take over driving the Ford so Todd could drive the 1964 Travco.
“But the snowplow is more important. I can drive it up front, and
keep the roads clear for all of us. Only gonna be more snow as we
get more northerly.”
“Minnefuckingsota,”
Lewis grumbled.
“Language,”
Marvie said, absentmindedly.
“Sorry,
ma'am,” the rough young man said dutifully.
“There's
a Fort there with people in it,” Todd said. “We can be safe
there. I know someone there.”
He
sounded so very sure, the others had no doubts to express. And he
was sure, if only because if he'd lost the little family he'd left
behind the way he'd lost his parents, he was certain he'd lose his
mind.