His arms were still locked around Hunterâs waist. He didnât think she was awake yet. Her arms were loose, the limp fingers of her right hand hooked in the waistband of his trousers above his right buttock. She was still pressed close against him. It was as if neither of them had moved at all in the night. Now, she seemed almost unbearably hot. He wanted to wriggle away from her body, but he couldnât bring himself to do so. She was breathing heavily, but her breathing wasnât even. He wondered if she was dreaming or waking up.
The rain had stopped and the wind had died. The air was thick with the odor of coconuts, sweat and mold. The inside of the tent smelled a little bit like morning, somehow. There were noises outside. Something like birds, but not birds. There were distant, disturbing braying and groaning sounds. Something like sheep, but not sheep. He strained to listen and realized that, far away, a familiar voice was yelling at everyone and no-one.
âGood morning.â
It seemed that Hunter moved only her lips when she spoke. He stayed still for a while, listening to the sound of her tongue wetting her lips. Her hand delicately removed itself from his rear end. She pulled away from him slowly, almost reluctantly.
âWell, that was some night,â she said, yawning, âhow are you feeling?â
âHot,â he said, âhot and dry.â
She laughed a cute, quiet laugh at some joke he didnât understand. Now she was fully withdrawn from him. He heard cracking and popping sounds as she stretched her arms and legs.
âLetâs get outside and see whatâs going on.â Hunter spoke nonchalantly. âI need to find something to eat.â
He heard Hunter work the tent zipper.
âNo way,â she said, âWhat the fuckâ¦â
âWhat is it?â
She had left the tent, like it had suddenly caught fire. He heard her footsteps slopping through mud and then crinkling and cracking on something brittle. She was moving things around. Heavy things. Heavy, soft things that slopped noisily back into the mud when she let them go.
âI think itâs Braverman,â she said. âI donât know how it can be, but I think itâsâ¦â
He found Sharpeâs assault rifle after a few seconds of frantic scrambling around. In Hunterâs haste to exist she had dislodged one of the improvised tent poles. The tent was collapsing as MacGregor tried to find his way out.
âWeâre back,â she said. âItâs impossible, but weâre back.â
He started towards her, but tripped over something and fell. For a moment he was horrified that the submachinegun he was carrying might go off. As it had been inert within the SOD, the safety might have been left off. He rolled as he fell, protecting the Heckler and Koch and landing shoulder first into a pile of rags and bones and soggy, decayed flesh.
âOh fucking hell! Whatâs this?â
Hunter was silent. Her breathing was rapid, panicky. There were noises in the distance, but the loudest by far was the distinct call of Hunter was coughing or retching. He couldnât tell which. Then, he heard a splash of liquid and an accompanying sound that told him what she was doing.
âAre you alright?â he started to his feet, delicately working through the bones and flesh heâd landed amongst. âEilidh?â
âIâm alright. Theyâre all dead. Theyâve been dead some time.â
âHeyyyy!â
The voice was loud and close. A young man, excited and surprised. But there was much more than that. The voice sounded somehow inhuman. It did not seem to be aimed at anyone or anything. MacGregor heard unsteady, heavy footsteps.
âOh my God!â Hunter said. âStay back! Just keep back. We were inside the SOD. We just want to find out whatâs happening. Charlie. Is that âHey!â The voice sounded insistent, confused. âHey? Heyyyy! I can see you!â
MacGregor was on one knee. He still had the submachine gun in his hands. He aimed it in the general direction of the voice.
âStay back, fucker!â MacGregor growled.
âItâs alright John,â Hunter shouted, âI think itâs Simard. Charlie, itâs John MacGregor and Hunter. What happened here?â
There was a pause. MacGregor heard Simardâs footsteps. They werenât normal. He was staggering around. Falling, picking himself back up. His breathing was heavy and noisy. He seemed to be moving away again. There was a sudden, foul smell. Worse than the decay that lingered vomitus amongst the heavier coconut odor of the nearby gorse.
âCharlie!â Hunter shouted. âWhere are you going?â
âHey!!â Simard shouted. âHâ¦heyyy!â
âJesus, Eilidh.â MacGregor gripped the gun tightly. âWhatâs was that?â
âI think itâs Charlie Simard. But heâs⦠heâs naked, and itâs like heâs feral or something. Oh shit, heâs running away from us. Charlie!
â
âLet him go,â MacGregor said quickly. âIt doesnât sound like heâs right in the head.â
âThere are bodies everywhere,â Hunter said, âbut theyâve been here some time. Braverman is lying about five meters from where the SOD was. There are about ten or fifteen people here. Itâs hard to tell how many exactly. The weeds and bushes have grown around their bodies. Thereâs a hollow where the SOD was, but it isnât there anymore.â
MacGregor heard Simard shouting in the distance. He relaxed his hand on the weapon.
âCan you take this gun? Just in case?â
âOkay,â she said, âbut we wonât need it. Thereâs nobody here.â
âStill,â he said, âjust in case. The safety catch is on. Itâs here.â He took her hand, guiding it to the mode selector just above and to the rear of the trigger mechanism. âMove it a click forward like this and you can squeeze off a bullet at a time. The other setting is fully automatic. I donât think you need to try that for now.â
âWe wonât need it. This is a wasteland. Thereâs nobody alive here. Simard â if itâs really him â is in a world of his own. Heâs got no clothes on and looks like heâs covered in his own⦠excrement.â
âWhat the fuck is going on here.â
âWe were inside the SOD for a lot longer than it seems,â Hunter said. âIt might even have been years. All the bodies here are men who were guarding the SOD, or part of the team about to come inside it. My horse is there, right where she fell. Thereâs not much left of the flesh. Only skin, bones and a little of the mane. The bodyâs in a state of advanced decay. Weâve travelled forward in time, John. Thereâs no other way to explain it.â
He thought about this for a moment.
âWeâve travelled through time?â
âThereâs no other explanation. This is the same place we were when we went into the SOD. Most of the posts that held up the guideline are still standing. The guideline itself is intact in places. There are tents and equipment here. All of its overgrown with weeds â except for the hollow where the SOD was.â
âItâs gone?â
âYes, itâs not there. Thereâs just a hollow where it was. Thereâs no sign of Sharpe or your friend Fraser.â
âAre you sure?â
âYes. The space around the SOD is quite empty. Nothing grew there for some time, by the looks of it.â
âFrase,â MacGregor whispered, âwhat about Simard?â
âI canât see him now. But Iâm not even sure it is him. He was moving around like he wasnât even human, tripping and moving almost like a chimpanzee. When I spoke to him he stared right at me. I looked into his eyes but there wasnât anything there. Nothing human, anyway. No recognition, no curiosity or any other kind of emotion. It looked like Simard, but I donât think it really was him.â
âJesus Christ. We have to get some help. We canât stay here â wherever the fuck isâ.
âAgreed, yes. Thereâs nothing much here besides a few wrecked tents and the dead bodies. Thereâs a backpack, but itâs been torn apart and everything inside it has been exposed to the elements. Itâs no use to us. The other tent is flat. Looks like it was empty when it collapsed. I donât remember even seeing these tents when we got here. I think we should follow the guideline back to the Southern Marker and see if anyone is still there. At the very least, the tents there were more substantial. If theyâre still standing we might find some food and water inside. Maybe a radio or something we can use to call for help.â
MacGregor nodded agreement. He heard Hunter stop moving. He was about to ask what she was doing when he heard the familiar clicking sound of Sharpeâs torch.
âPowerâs working,â she observed.
âGood,â MacGregor said. âOkay, Iâm with you. Letâs get to the Southern Marker and see whatâs going on there. What time do you think it is?â
âFeels like early morning,â Hunter replied. âThe sunâs pretty low and bright. I think weâre in either spring or summer now. âLetâs just get going. How can I help you?â
âJust walk along and Iâll be on your left,â MacGregor replied, âIâll touch your arm if you donât mind. You can let me know if Iâm about to trip over a rock or boulder or something. Other than that, I should be good.â
âAlright,â Hunter said. âThe line is about three meters ahead of you as youâre facing now. There arenât any obstacles.â
âOkay, thanks.â
The ground was thick with weeds and wet from the rain. The morning sun felt good against his right cheek as he followed Hunter to the line.
âIt does feel warm,â he commented. âLike April or May.â
âIâm at the line now. Weâve got quite a distance to go, so we should get moving.â
âOkay.â
They walked in silence for about a minute. MacGregor kept his hand lightly attached to Hunterâs elbow. There were sounds MacGregor didnât recognize, but they were very far away. Now and again he imagined that he heard Simard shouting, but it was hard to tell. Hunter made a good pace and didnât fret over him or offer assistance. The ground was uneven, but he made a good pace next to her. Now and again she would warn him of a dip in the ground or a particularly overgrown part of the route.
âLook out here,â Hunter said, âweeds have grown all-round the guide line. Itâs that spiky stuff. Follow me round it.â
âOkay.â
âWeâre almost there. I can see the Southern Marker in the distance maybe a mile away. Looks like at least one of the tents is still standing.â
âWhat else can you see? Where are we?â
âOpen country. Thereâs nothing much else to see, John. There are some trees in the distance to our left. The guide line looks mostly intact all the way to the Southern Marker. I think there are some sheep on our right. Canât see that far.â
âWhat are those noises?â MacGregor asked. âCan you hear them?â
She stopped moving to listen.
âI donât know what that is. Perhaps itâs the sheep, John.â
She started walking again. They were back at the thin, plastic guide line. He stayed right next to Hunter, gingerly touching her elbow. A cold burst of wind carried louder sounds with it. The sounds reminded MacGregor of cries of pain or anguish. They didnât sound animalistic â or human.
âThatâs not sheep.â
âNo, I donât think it is.â
She didnât say anything else. He felt a spot of rain on the side of his face. A few seconds later there was another. The air was turning colder again.
âHey!â
The voice was up ahead, almost out of earshot. The same voice as before. Simard, MacGregor thought.
âShit, there he is again,â Hunter said. âHeâs been at the camp, I think.â
âCan you see who it is?â
âItâs Simard, again. Iâm sure of it. But thereâs something seriously wrong with him.â
âHey!â The voice sounded excited. â
âHere he comes,â Hunter said. âHeâs running towards us. Orâ¦
.â
âWhat?â
âHeâs not running. Heâs sort of⦠itâs like heâs almost like a⦠gorilla.â
âOkay. Try to talk to him,â MacGregor suggested. âDoes he look dangerous? Youâve got the HKâ¦â
âOkay. He just looks excited. Heâs looking right at us.â
âHey!â
The voice was close. Maybe five to ten meters away. MacGregor was nervous. There was nothing intelligent in the way Simard spoke. It was a single word. This time, Simard seemed to be making a manic statement. It was as if Simard was trying to explain something, but was the only word in his vocabulary.
âItâs not Simard,â Hunter whispered. âI mean⦠I mean, it Simard, but it isnât him. It looks like him, but itâs something different.â
âFâ¦.fâ¦â The Simard-thing said. âFâ¦fuh⦠fuh⦠fucking hey!â
âWhat do you want?â Hunter asked it.
âHey hey!â The Simard-thing replied.
âCharlie, what happened to you? Where are your clothes?â
Simard-thing made a sound like it was scrabbling in the dirt.
âDonât do that!â Hunter shouted. âCharlie, you canât eat that!â
âHeyyyyy!â The voice sounded anguished. âF⦠fuhhhâ¦. Heeyyyyy!!â
MacGregor heard the weapon move in Hunterâs hands. He imagined that he heard her click the mode selector forward, but it might have been his imagination. But she had repositioned the submachine gun. He wondered if she was aiming it at the strange Simard-thing.
âWeâre going to the Southern Marker, Charlie. Come with us. Weâll get you some help.â
Simard-thing didnât say anything. MacGregor heard the sound of grunting and chewing. Simard-thing was eating something.
âHey,â Simard-thing said quietly.
There was a sound of movement. For a sudden, anxious moment MacGregor imagined that the strange Simard-thing was about to attack. He realized the strange creature was running away again. He felt intense relief.
âCharlie!â Hunter shouted.
MacGregor wanted to tell Hunter not to call after whatever the Simard-thing was, but it wasnât listening anyway. Again, the creature disappeared into the distance. Hunter sounded like she was crying. It was hard to tell.
âItâs beginning to rain, again,â MacGregor said. âWe should get to the camp.â
âI almost shot him,â Hunter sounded pained, exhausted. âI almost shot him. He had a crazy look in his eye for a moment. I was sure he was going to attack. But then⦠then he started eating the grass and the dirt.â
âShit,â MacGregor said. âItâs not Simard, is it?â
âNo. Come on, letâs get out of the rain. Itâs getting colder. Thereâs dark clouds coming.â
âWe should have brought the coats,â MacGregor commented.
âThereâll be equipment at the Southern Marker,â Hunter said. âThey have everything there. Letâs get moving.â
âIf it isnât Simard, then who is it?â
âI donât know. Something else.â
It took about ten minutes to reach the Southern Marker. Hunter warned MacGregor that there were dead bodies. Horses and men. There was a smell of death, MacGregor noted. Much more prominent than the odor at the SOD site. Hunter informed him that two of the four large tents here were still intact. Of the other two, one had disappeared completely and the second had been torn asunder by the elements.
âEveryoneâs dead,â Hunter said, out of the blue. âEveryone is dead. It killed everyone.â
There was no emotion in her voice. She was stating a fact and, for MacGregor, her words were every bit as frightening as the strange Simard-creatureâs âMaybe the military used some weapon to destroy the SOD,â MacGregor offered. âMaybe thatâs what happened. The air force dropped some weapon and it killed everyone in the area. Simard survived, somehow, but heâs been ⦠injured by it.â
He stopped talking and wondered if his statement could possibly ring true. Had some kind of nuclear device been used to destroy the SOD? Was that why everyone in the Southern Marker was dead? Was the whole area radioactive? Were he and Hunter living on borrowed time, their blood cells poisoned and dying?
âA nuclear bomb,â MacGregor blurted out. âIs that what this is? Did they blow up the SOD? Did everyone here die of radiation poisoning?â
âDonât panic,â Hunter said. âIt canât be that. I think this is the same thing that stopped Braverman and Simard getting into the SOD. It reached this far too, knocking everyone out and killing them. The SOD did this, not us. But I donât know why it left Simard behind â or whatever that thing is.â
They left the guideline behind. MacGregor felt himself shake with fear. The ground was hard under foot. Tarmac, he guessed, with the occasional weed poking through. He didnât remember the hard ground from before.
âJesus, weâve been gone a long time,â Hunter said. âA really long time.â
âWhy? Whatâs wrong?â
âEverythingâs old. Aged, I should say. Weâve been gone a long time,â she repeated.
âHow long?â
âI canât tell. The bodies are almost completely decomposed. There are two horses here and both of them have decomposed completely. Theyâre just skin on bones. But theyâre exposed to the elements and to⦠to whatever carrion there might be around here.â
âFoxes,â MacGregor suggested, ârats? crows, magpies. But I donât hear any birds.â
âPerhaps,â Hunter agreed, âI donât hear any birds either. And I canât see any in the sky.â
âShit, do you think the SOD killed here?â
âI donât know what to think,â Hunter unzipped something. âCome on, letâs get inside before we get soaked again. The rain wonât last long, I think. There are clear skies coming.â
She had barely stopped talking when the strong smell hit him so suddenly he almost vomited.
âOh fuck,â MacGregor said, âthatâs not good.â
âNo,â Hunter said, âletâs try the other tent.â
She zipped up the tent with the offending odor. The next tent was empty. The smell from the first tent lingered in MacGregorâs nostrils as she guided him to one of the beds.
âWait here a minute,â she said. âI want to look at the bodies in the other tent.â
He wanted to protest. The idea of being left alone did not appeal to him. But then, she was gone. He heard the ten flapping in the wind, cold air coming in along with a few droplets of rain. Hunter took a deep breath and unzipped the second tent. He could make out the sounds of heavy bags being lifted. Then there was the sound of something hard and heavy dropped to the ground. Hunter swore, or cursed under her breath. Then she was coughing and retching. The zipper moved again in rapid jerks. Once, twice, three times before Hunter managed to close it off completely. He heard her coming back, spitting bile or the last mouthful of vomit out before stepping back into the tent MacGregor occupied.
âWell, that was particularly gross,â she said. âThere are three dead soldiers in the tent. The bodies arenât completely decomposed. Iâd guess they were protected inside the tent. One man died in his sleep, I think. The other two were crouched together beside a radio set.â
âWe could use that,â MacGregor said. âNow that the powerâs back.â
âNo,â Hunter said, âtrust me, we canât. One of the soldiers fell on top of the radio when he died. When his corpse⦠well, we just canât use the radio. Trust me.â
âThere must be others,â MacGregor said. âWhat did you bring back?â
âI donât know yet. I just didnât want to hang about in there so I grabbed what I could.â
âWe could use something to eat.â
âOkay, something to eat sounds great. Iâm sure thereâs some rations in here, anyway.â
âOh shit, can we get them open? I am absolutely starving.â
âWhat about the radio? There might be one in this pack?â
âIâd rather have one of the ration packs,â MacGregor said. âCan you see any? Look for a cardboard box withâ¦â
âThere are a bunch of them. Some have been torn open. Looks like the power went out here too before⦠well, beforeâ¦â
âBefore they all died,â MacGregor finished. âWhat about the ration packs? Can you see any of the meal sets? They look like silver foil packets. Theyâve usually gotâ¦â
âChicken curry and rice,â Hunter said, handing MacGregor a heavy packet. âThere are some sweets and other things. Biscuits. A cereal bar, this says.â
âLetâs have that,â MacGregor said. âWhat about you? Arenât you hungry?â
âA little,â Hunter admitted.
âIâm starving,â MacGregor said. âSorry, but Iâve got to eat something. Do you see any water?â
âSure. There are about six bottles of water here. Thereâs even a can of Pepsi â unopened â and a bunch of Mars Bars.â
MacGregor had been trying to open the chicken curry with his teeth. He considered the Mars Bar for a moment, but decided to persevere with the meal.
âDo you want me to cut that open?â Hunter said. âThere are scissors here â and some metal plates.â
MacGregor stopped what he was doing. He handed the pouch back to Hunter.
âI can heat this up,â she said. âThereâs a little gas stove here.â
âI donât care,â MacGregor said. âCold is fine.
âIâm going to do coffee anyway,â Hunter persisted.
âIâll have a coffee if youâre offering,â MacGregor said. âBut Iâll eat the curry cold. Iâm starving.â
She handed him the plate of food. He took it, then felt her poking at him with something plastic.
âSpork,â she explained.
âNice. Thanks.â
He took the plastic utensil and started to wolf down the chicken curry and rice. It had been a long time since heâd eaten British Army rations. The taste hadnât improved much, if at all. He didnât care all that much. There was emptiness in his stomach that needed filling, even though the smell of death lingered heavy in the air. After a few mouthfuls, he became more aware of himself and considered Hunterâs presence. He slowed his consumption of the desperately needed food as Hunter busied herself with the coffee.
Rain was now hitting the tent, but not as vigorously as it had the previous night. The smell of coffee had never been more welcome. Heâd finished the chicken curry when Hunter warned him that a hot metal mug was on its way.
âThanks. Can you see any cigarettes?â
âYes. Thereâs a pack or a crate or whatever youâd call it. A bunch of them all stuck together. Do you want me to light one for you?â
âIâve got my plastic lighter,â MacGregor said. âThanks, though.â
He heard the sound of plastic snapping and tearing. She handed him a packet. It still had its plastic seal on.
âSo, youâre not hungry anymore?â
âIâve fed my stomach,â MacGregor grunted. âNow I have to feed my addiction.â
He balanced the coffee mug precariously on his knee and lit the cigarette. After heâd taken a second drag, a random thought entered his head.
âI assumed that you donât smoke,â he said, âor Iâd have offered you one.â
âI smoke once a day,â Hunter said. âThis is as good a time as any. So you can offer me one if you like.â
He did and she, of course, accepted.
âJohn Players,â MacGregor said. âI can always tell the taste.â
âThatâs right.â
âThanks for the coffee. Canât believe Iâm having coffee again. After Sharpe kicked off in the SOD I thought weâd all had it. Somethingâs really wrong out here, though. I donât need eyes to see that.â
âYes, somethingâs wrong here.â
âBut at least weâve got food, coffee and shelter, not to mention cigarettes.â
âThereâs no radio in the backpack here. Once weâve eaten and rested a bit Iâll have a look round. There might be something in the vehicles I saw back towards the road. Once weâve scavenged what we can here Iâll go take a look at them.â
âWhat are they?â
âLand Rovers or something military. Look pretty dilapidated, but there they are. I think I saw a helicopter in the distance too. Whatever it is, itâs lying on its side.â
âMaybe itâs the one we crashed in,â MacGregor suggested.
âPerhaps,â Hunter didnât sound so sure. âWeâll see.â
Once Hunter had finished her cigarette she went out again to retrieve some more equipment from the other tent. She didnât choke or retch this time, MacGregor noted. She returned in less than two minutes with an armful of something heavy.
âAnother backpack?â MacGregor asked.
âCoats. There was only one backpack. There are more cigarettes, but I think youâve got enough here. These two coats were lying on foldup chairs. Iâll be swimming around in mine, but yours should fit okay.â
Hunter finally decided to get something to eat. MacGregor listened to her prepare something from the ration boxes. He examined the jacket sheâd handed him. It was a medium weight waterproof parka with a detachable hood.
âNice. So, whatâs the plan once youâve eaten?â
She didnât reply immediately. He realized that she was already sporking tinned sausages and beans into her mouth. After a few seconds she lifted her coffee mug and said, âGet to the nearest town. Get some help.â
âMore walking?â
âPerhaps. It might be possible to start one of the jeeps. Iâll drive us there.â
âOkay. Iâm going to nip outside for another smoke, okay?â
âNo, donât do that. You can smoke in here. Itâs alright.â
âBut youâre eatingâ¦â
âIâm a good communicator, John. If I wasnât happy with you smoking in here I would tell you.â
âOkay. Fair enough. So, we get to the nearest town and thenâ¦?â
âThatâs the end of the plan. It looks like nobody knows what happened here. Whoever Braverman was really working with doesnât know what happened to the SOD. This place is about a mile from the nearest road. If nobody else knew about the Southern Marker thenâ¦â
âNo, thatâs not possible. Our helicopter was heading for RAF Lossiemouth. They were expecting us there.â
âThen somethingâs happened there, too.â
MacGregor lit his cigarette, finally.
âThis? Do you think has happened there?â
âI donât know,â Hunter sounded like her mouth was full. âI hope not.â
He considered that for a moment. Insane as it might seem, there seemed to be no other way to explain the absence of back-up personnel at the Southern Marker. The SODâs energy siphoning power had killed everyone here, just as it had killed Braverman and the others whoâd failed to make it inside. But how far had the effect extended? MacGregor estimated that heâd walked at least two miles to reach the Southern Marker. It had seemed much closer on the horse. So the SODâs influence had extended that far at least.
âTheyâre all dead,â MacGregor blurted out. âLossiemouth, Inverness. Maybe even further. Everyoneâs dead.â
She didnât say anything to that. He realized she was still eating.
âSomeone would have been here before now. And the bodies? The dead soldiers and horses? Just left to rot? Someone at Lossiemouth have known where the SOD was and where the Southern Marker was. Iâm guessing that there would be a camp at the north, west and east boundaries of this thing, too. Everyone there has to be dead. Otherwise theyâd have come. If weâve been gone for months or even years then thereâs no way anyone who knew about the SOD is still alive.â
âLetâs find out,â Hunter said.
âIâm ready when you are.â
âAlright. Iâll fill the backpack with a few things from the ration packs. We can always come back here if we need more supplies. It would be better to get moving sooner rather than later.â
âOkay then.â
She packed the bag in less than two minutes. When he heard her zipping up his coat, he did the same. He offered to carry the rucksack, but she declined. They left the tent together, Hunter zipping it shut behind them.
The sun was warm. The air smelled like springtime and death. The rain had stopped. MacGregor felt the skin on his forehead tingle with the sunshine. He guessed that it was around midday. As Hunter moved ahead of him he felt her hand press lightly against his chest.
âWatch for the tent there,â she warned. âDo you want to take my hand?â
MacGregor groped around, confused. He couldnât feel a tent nearby.
âI thought we were past them already. Thereâs only two left, right?â
âWe are. This oneâs collapsed. Itâs just a mess of canvas and broken poles.â
He remembered his collapsible cane, lost since the helicopter crash.
âAre any of the poles intact? Something I can use as a cane?â
âHold on.â
Hunter searched around for a while. He heard the sound of something snapping. Hunter cursed. There was more snapping and tearing. Then she was stomping something into the ground with the heel of her foot.
âThis any good? Watch the other end is a bit rough, but this end feels okay.â
He opened his right hand and she placed the tent pole into his grip.
âItâs good.â He moved it from right to left carefully, âfeels almost like the real thing. Thanks. This will help.â
âI can wind some tape around it if you like.â
âNo, itâs fine.â
They walked together. MacGregor allowed Hunter to guide him around the collapsed tents. Soon, he felt asphalt underfoot. He probed ahead with his improvised cane, walking forward cautiously alongside Hunter. He found the first of the two Land Rovers. As he tapped against its headlamps with his cane, Hunter was already trying the door.
âOpen,â she said, unnecessarily, âand the keys are in the ignition. And thereâs a radio.â
âAll we need now is a bottle of Southern Comfort and it will be Christmas day,â MacGregor commented.
He heard the keys turn in the ignition. There was no sound of the starter motor turning.
âDim lights,â Hunter said. âBatteryâs dead.â
âWhat about the radio?â
âNo power,â Hunter said. âThereâs a charger station in the car. Looks like itâs wired into the console. Do you think there will be enough power to charge the handset?â
âNot if the dashboard lights are dim. The batteryâs been sitting too long. But we might be able to push start this thing.â
âIt looks really heavy,â Hunter said.
âYes, they are,â MacGregor said, âbut we can give it a try.â
âAll the tires are flat. Itâs going to be impossible.â
MacGregor did not agree. He was sure that together they could do it. However, even turning the Land Rover to face in the right direction proved to them how impossible it would be to push start the vehicle. After about two minutes of intense effort, they gave up. The rain had started up again. MacGregor was thankful for the new coat.
âWeâll find another car on this road,â Hunter said. âThereâs bound to be one. Iâve got the radio handset.â
âOkay. Well, letâs get going. Feels like itâs going to get cold soon.â
âYes.â
The wind was getting up. This was, after all, the north of Scotland. Hunter was making a good pace. He was nervous about keeping up with her, even with the cane swishing the air before him. It was the first time heâd felt any find of fear or apprehension since heâd left the SOD.
âYouâre a psychiatrist?â
âIâm a psychologist,â Hunter explained, âI work with young adults who have behavioral problems.â
âOkay, but you know about mental health stuff, like a psychiatrist?â
âI help people with mental health issues.â
âRight. I just wanted to say that Iâve had trouble going outside since I lost my sight. But I feel different now. Itâs weird, but I donât feel scared. Or, I didnât. Not until⦠Well, I donât feel nervous the way I used to. Is that normal?â
âYou were nervous about going outdoors? Always, or since losing your sight?â
âSince losing my sight.â
âWhat were you nervous about?â
âI donât know what you mean?â
âWell, what do you think would happen when you went outside?â
MacGregor thought about this for a moment. âGetting lost.â he said easily. âI donât even know. I just didnât like doing it.â
âLosing your sight is a traumatic thing. The armed forces are pretty good these days at rehabilitating soldiers whoâve lost their sight in the line of duty. Did you have other injuries, or was it just your sight?â
MacGregor felt his nervousness increase. He drew a deep breath and exhaled it in a noisy shiver.
âItâs difficult to talk about it, isnât it,â Hunter said. She stopped walking and he caught up with her in four long paces. âIâm sorry.â
âItâs alright,â MacGregor lied, âI⦠I donât know whatâs wrong with me. I was just going to ask you why I wasnât feeling so anxious and thenâ¦â he laughed drily, ââ¦then I started to feel weird.â
âItâs all understandable,â she said. âOnce we find some help we should talk about this more. I want to talk to you about this, John. Iâm just a little bit distracted right now.â
He was about to ask what was wrong. Then he heard what Hunter was hearing.
âItâs a sheep,â she said, âI think.â
âHow can you not tell? Can you see it?â
âItâs right ahead on the road.â
The sheep didnât sound like a sheep. It sounded like an old man snoring after a heavy meal. There was an occasional growl or moan, as if the old man was restless in his angry slumber. Hunter kept walking towards the creature and MacGregor followed at the same pace.
âItâs a sheep.â
âYou sound like youâre not sure.â
âItâs not got any wool,â Hunter said. âIt looks like itâs just been shaved.â
âShorn,â MacGregor corrected.
âWhatever,â Hunter whispered testily. âItâs got no hair or wool on it. Whichever one itâs to have is missing.â
âWool,â MacGregor said. âItâs a bald sheep? Itâs on the road in front of us? Is it sleeping?â
âNo, itâs staring at us. Or staring through us. Itâs just standing there staring into space.â
MacGregor listened to the sheepâs heavy breathing, grunts and groans. He waved his cane tentatively in the general direction of the sound. It touched against something that he assumed was the sheepâs neck or shoulder. The animal didnât react in any way. The heavy breathing and grunting continued. MacGregor moved the cane again, exploring what he now realized must be the animalâs face.
âItâs just staring at you?â he said.
âItâs staring at you now,â Hunter answered. âOther than that, itâs just standing there. And it looks like itâs barely able to stand. Itâs emaciated, like itâs been starving.â
âSomeone must have shorn it,â MacGregor considered. âIt canât be a hairless or wool-less sheep.â
âHold on, let me get it some grass.â
MacGregor listened to the animalâs monotonous sounds and decided that Hunter wasnât taking too much of a risk. The sheep sounded like it was unaware of its surroundings, let alone the two people who had accosted it. Hunter pulled a handful of grass or straw or something. Then she presented it to the animal.
âItâs interested,â she said. âItâs smelling the grass.â
âShit, donât let it bite you.â
âIt wonât,â Hunter said softly. âThereâs something wrong with it. Itâs⦠itâs not⦠Itâs not right. I donât think anyoneâs taken this sheepâs wool off. I think it never had any wool.â
âIs it eating the grass?â
âSort of. Itâs sucking it. Thereâs something wrong with this animal.â
âOkay, this is giving me the creeps. Can we get going now?â
âYes. Perhaps thatâs for the best,â Hunter said. âCome, letâs get moving.â
âWhat about the sheep?â
âI guess it will be okay. There are others lying nearby. Dead. I suppose this one will die, too.â
âFuckâs sake,â MacGregor muttered. âWhat the fuckâs going on here. Now I really am freaking out.â
âI donât know. We should keep moving. Donât freak out, John. Itâs just a sheep. Thereâs a house or something up ahead. Weâll find somebody or something there. Perhaps there will be batteries for the radio, at least.â
MacGregor felt overwhelming relief. He laughed out loud, reflexively and completely helplessly.
âAlright, thank f⦠thank goodness for that. Letâs get out of here.â
âThis is a country lane,â Hunter said. âItâs long and windy. The house is about a mile away.â
âLetâs get going then. What time do you think it is?â
âMidday,â Hunter answered, âmaybe a little after.â
âThatâs what I thought. Okay, letâs get to the house. I donât like this rain, or the scary sheep.â
âPoor wee sheep,â Hunter said flatly.
There was a low moan of thunder from far away. The rain seemed to be coming sideways and slapped against the side of MacGregorâs face. He tapped his cane against the narrow road surface and followed Hunter as she moved ahead of him.
âMore sheep in the field,â Hunter observed. âLots of bodies, but some still seem to be alive.â
âDo they have wool?â
âSome of them. But theyâre not right. Itâs like theyâve been⦠damaged. Theyâre just standing there staring at us.â
âThatâs really weird. I canât wait to get out of here.â
âMe too. How are you feeling now? You seem a little bit more relaxed.â
MacGregor nodded to himself. Hunter was right. He didnât feel nervous anymore.
âIâm okay,â he replied, âI donât know what sets it off.â
âItâs better not to think about it,â Hunter explained, âItâs better not to dwell on the things that make us anxious.â
âI donât know what makes me anxious anyway,â MacGregor said.
âOkay. We should talk about it once weâve found out whatâs going on here. But if thereâs a house there might be a car. Something we can actually use. And batteries for the radio.â
âThat would be good. And a phone.â
Hunter didnât answer. MacGregor didnât say anything else. He thought about it. Would there be a phone? Would there be The thought of there being nobody at the house wasnât distressing to MacGregor. He thought about it some more and realized that heâd actually prefer it that way. He wasnât sure why. But he did have Hunter to keep him safe. He smiled at the thought.
âWhatâs funny?â
He felt his cheeks flush. He shook his head.
âNothing, just thoughts.â
âPositive thoughts.â
âPositive thoughts,â he echoed.
The improvised cane worked out well. He found the road easy to negotiate. Hunter warned him when there was an obstacle, but there werenât many. The worst part of the walk was passing the decaying corpse of another sheep that had wandered onto the road to die days or weeks ago. They hurried past the dead animal and continued along the road. Soon, Hunter was able to tell MacGregor what she could see. The news was promising.
âLooks like a little farm cottage. Thereâs a four-wheel drive parked on the grass out front and something smaller in the driveway.â
âSmaller sounds good,â MacGregor said.
âItâs a Mini,â Hunter said.
They reached the cottage. There was a wooden fence and a gate which Hunter opened. A narrow path of large, wobbly paving stones led MacGregor through overgrown bushes that scraped against both sides of his body as he made his way to the front of the cottage. He heard Hunter fumbling with the lock and then pushing hard against the door.
âLocked?â
âLocked. Windows closed, too.â
MacGregor moved forward. He reached for the door and, on finding it, hammered it hard with his knuckles.
âMaybe someoneâs home.â
âI doubt it.â
He was curious as to the tone of her voice, but even without it he had the same feeling. The house felt vacant.
âNobodyâs here,â Hunter said. âIâm going to break a window.â
Before he could answer, sheâd already done just that. There was a loud smash as something heavy plunged through a window less than a few meters away.
âStand back a bit,â she said.
He took a pace backwards. Hunter hammered around the inside of the broken window with something like a brick or a heavy piece of wood. She climbed through.
âBe careful,â he said.
It took her less than thirty seconds to reach the inside of the front door. She unlocked it and he reached for the door as it opened, using the heavy wood to guide himself through.
âSmells a bit,â Hunter said uselessly. âThe occupants might still be here.â
MacGregor sniffed the air. There was an odor, but it wasnât the same smell of death heâd experienced at the Southern Marker. Hunter closed the door behind him.
âThere are doors on your left and right,â she said. âRight is the kitchen. I think thatâs where the smellâs coming from.â
âItâs rotten food,â MacGregor said. âMeat somewhere. Fruit too, I think.â
âAnd a dead cat,â Hunter added.
He made his way around the lower floor of the house, using his cane to guide himself. Hunter disappeared upstairs to search for the house occupants. They were nowhere to be found. Nor were the keys for the oversized Nissan Qashqai. Hunter was triumphant when she located the keys for the Mini, which she told MacGregor was colored red. MacGregor had explored the sitting room and hallway. Heâd found a chest of drawers in the sitting room, but there was nothing of value in any of the drawers. In the hallway heâd found a telephone stand with a single drawer. On inspection there had been a packet of AA batteries that Hunter said should fit the walkie-talkie. There just werenât enough of them. MacGregor returned to the lounge and retrieved the two remote control units he had found. There were two AA batteries in each remote. Combined with the four in the drawer, Hunter was able to replace the batteries in the walkie-talkie.
âOkay,â she said. âThe moment of truth. Provided the batteries have enough power in them.â
She switched on the walkie talkie. There was loud, heavy static.
âTurn the volume down,â MacGregor advised. âWeâve got to conserve the batteries.â
She lowered the volume.
âThereâs an LCD display on the front. Says weâre on channel 1. Thereâs some other letters there. DCS is flickering, whatever that is. Thereâs an up button.â He heard a momentary break in the static. âOkay, thatâs channel 2 now. So the up button changes channel upwards.â
The radio had 12 channels. Hunter flicked through each of them, but there was only static. She returned to channel 1.
âShall I make a call?â
âOkay,â he said, âbut letâs go upstairs first. Weâll get better range that way.â
He followed Hunter upstairs, tripping over a long and sausage shaped draft excluder on the last step. She caught his shoulders before he could collide with the wall. There were three bedrooms. MacGregor suggested the one that faced south.
âTransmitting eats the batteries up,â MacGregor explained. âSo we need to do it just briefly and then listen for an answer. These things look like they only have like a 5 or 10 mile range, so there may not be anyone near enough to answer us. But weâre north of Inverness, right?â
âMore than 5 miles north. I think weâre about twenty or thirty miles north. The nearest town is Tain. Tainâs about ten to fifteen miles south of us.â
âOkay, well it wonât hurt to try the radio,â MacGregor said.
Hunter made a brief and efficient call on each channel. They listened to the static for about thirty seconds before switching to another frequency and trying again. There was no response.
âWe drive down then,â MacGregor said.
The Miniâs central locking worked but when Hunter turned the key in the ignition there was only a quiet clicking sound.
âHow are the tires?â
âDeflated, but not completely flat. Iâll open the gate and we can push it onto the lane.â
âOkay.â
The heavy metal latch keeping the five bar wooden gate closed was rusted shut, but Hunter hammered at it with a rock until it gave way. She swung the gate open and returned to MacGregor at the front of the Mini.
âHere we go,â Hunter said.
He placed both his hands on the bonnet of the car and pushed hard. Hunter held the driverâs door open as she pushed also. The Mini moved easily despite the flat tires and the drivewayâs slight incline. MacGregor felt the car turning to the left and moving through ninety degrees.
âThis way is almost downhill,â Hunter explained. âIt was a lot easier to push than I thought. Do you think you can do it yourself if I sit inside?â
âIâll try,â MacGregor said, moving round to the back of the vehicle. âJust shout to me before you have a go at starting it. Otherwise I might smack my face off the back window.â
âI will.â
She opened the back door first and placed her equipment on the back seat of the car. Then the driverâs door opened. It didnât close behind her.
âI donât want to try the electric windows. They probably wonât work and itâll just kill the battery even more. Iâll keep the door open.â
âGood thinking. Okay, Iâm ready when you are.â
He felt her helping him get the car moving, then the car bounced as she got into the seat. He pushed with all his strength, and it was hard work. His forearms and shoulders ached and he felt his thighs stinging.
âTrying!â Hunter shouted.
He prepared himself for the jolt. It followed a half-second later. The engine spluttered but it failed to start.
âAlmost,â Hunterâs tone was excited. âOne more time!â
It was more difficult than he thought. It had been over ten years since heâd helped push a car. That time, heâd been younger and fitter. His legs felt wobbly, but he pushed with all of his strength. Soon the car was moving forward quickly enough that he was about to tell Hunter to try again. Then she did.
âHere we go!â
The car jolted. His legs were a little rubbery now and he almost fell against the back window. The engine coughed but failed to catch. But the car still had momentum. Hunter tried a second time. This time the car started with a healthy roar.
âYes!â MacGregor shouted.
Hunter laughed, revving the Mini.
âBrilliant. We have transport!â
âWhatâs the fuel situation?â MacGregor asked, moving round to the passenger seat.
âAbout three quarters full,â Hunter said. âEnough to get to Glasgow, at the very least. But we need to get some air into these tires.â
âGlasgow?â MacGregor was surprised. âWhat about Tain?â
âYou know, I donât really think weâre going to find anybody there,â Hunter said.
MacGregor had been thinking the same thing. He hadnât voiced his thoughts, or wanted to. Now that Hunter had revealed her suspicions, he felt as if all of his thoughts were going to tumble out of his mouth at once.
âYou think everyone in Tain is going to be dead?â he asked. âWhat about Inverness? What about the South?â
He closed the door behind himself. For a moment he considered putting on the seat belt but decided against it. His words had echoed his own thoughts. He had begun to think that the SODâs effect had reached much further than either of them would like to consider possible.
âI donât know how far this has spread, but I donât think weâre going to find anything at Tain. Weâll have to wait and find out.â
âI donât think weâre going to find anyone alive,â MacGregor said. âI think this is everywhere.â
She turned the car around in silence. He heard her stabbing buttons and there were quiet beeping sounds. He She was trying the car radio. The car stopped moving forward for a moment.
âThere are six pre-sets,â she explained, âbut thereâs nothing on any of them. Thatâs the automatic tuner moving up the scale now.â
The car started off. The radio didnât make any sound at all. MacGregor wondered how far along the dial the tuner had gone. Suddenly, Hunter swerved to the left. The movement caught him off guard and he knocked his elbow against the car window.
âSheep on the road,â Hunter said. âSorry. Looks like itâs in pretty poor shape.â
There were more sheep or obstacles. The Mini weaved its way down the narrow country lane towards the main road.
âThe radioâs completely dead,â Hunter said. âI think itâs been round the whole dial twice now. Thereâs nothing butââ
âNothing but MacGregor finished. âAt least in the old days you got static. Now, thereâs just nothing.â
âThey call it automatic gain control,â Hunter explained. âThereâs static, but itâs blanked out so you canât hear it.â
âThere should be a button for that,â MacGregor complained. âI like the static. I hate the sound of silence.â
There was another object on the road. Another sheep or some other piece of debris that Hunter didnât share with MacGregor. The Mini was turning in a wide arc to the right. MacGregor realized theyâd reached a larger road.
âIs this the A9?â
âNo,â Hunter said, âbut weâre not far away. I can see it up ahead. There are a few cars, but none of them are moving. And there are bodies.â
âThat doesnât sound great. Is the radio still trying to find a station?â
âYes. Iâll just keep it searching. If it picks anything up weâll hear it. Now, we need to find a garage and put some air into the tires.â
It only took a few minutes for Hunter to reach what she guessed was the A9. This was the main road connecting Scotlandâs capital city with the northernmost coastal town of Thurso. Hunter guessed that there would be a petrol station somewhere along the way. She turned the Mini south towards Tain.
âLorry ran into the trees,â she said. âItâs been there some time. Thereâs a hatchback on the other side of the road. Looks like there are at least two bodies in it.â
âFuck.â
âWe just need to keep going.â
The radio remained silent. MacGregor listened to the drumming of the road surface as Hunter drove to the nearest fuel station. It was much further than sheâd anticipated. After about fifteen minutes of slow driving Hunter pulled off the road.
âHere we go,â she said. âItâs a little bit⦠busy.â
âWhat do you mean?â
âWell, weâre not the only ones here. There are other people here. Animals, too.â
The Mini was quiet, but MacGregor could feel the engine vibrating through his knee that was resting against the center console. He was curious as to why Hunter hadnât shut the engine off. Then he heard something heavy thudding against the window.
âShit!â
There was a sound outside. Something between an animalâs growl and the moan of a deranged person.
âTheyâre all⦠pretty fucked-looking,â Hunter said. âThey arenât people. Theyâre⦠theyâre almost like zombies.â
The bumping continued against MacGregorâs window.
âWhatâs he doing?â MacGregor asked.
âItâs a woman,â Hunter said. âSheâs looking in the car, but she has a vacant look in her eyes. There isnât anybody in there. Inside her head, I mean. Sheâs like Simard. None of them have any clothes on.â
The bumping continued. MacGregor could hear fingernails scrambling against the window.
âIs she trying to get in?â
âI donât think so. Sheâs just touching the glass. I donât think she even knows thereâs someone in here. Hold on a minute. Thereâs another one. Look out now!â
MacGregor winced without thinking. A half second later, something hard cracked against the window next to his left ear.
âShit!â Hunter said, âThat oneâs got a can of Pepsi or something. Give me a minute.â
The car was moving. Again MacGregorâs window was struck. He heard shouting from outside. It sounded like words.
âHeâs saying something.â
âI know, but letâs get a little distance from them.â
She moved the car about five meters forward. She opened her door. MacGregor heard the man outside shouting again, this time more clearly through the open door.
âHey there! Just⦠just hey there!â
The voice was strange, like Simardâs. It was like the words didnât come naturally to the person.
âWhere the hell are their clothes?â Hunter said. âHold on now, the one shouting at us is coming across.â
âIs he the only one?â MacGregor was nervous. âHow many are there? Are they all naked?â
âAll naked,â Hunter replied, âThereâs about eight of them. But theyâre all just milling around the petrol station. Nobodyâs paying much attention to us except this one man.â
âHey there!â the voice sounded almost jovial now. âHey there! Just⦠hey!â
MacGregor realized that Hunter still had the door open. The car moved as she stepped out of it. He heard her pick up Sharpeâs submachine gun.
âDonât forget the safety catch,â he called.
The Miniâs engine was still running. MacGregor had a sudden fearful moment that the car would begin moving of its own accord. Then his focus was on the situation outside the car again. Hunter was speaking to the shouting man.
âWhat happened here? Where are your clothes?â
âCold!â the man said. âHey! Hey there! Itâs cold! Cold, cold!â
âPut some clothes on then, for sake!â MacGregor whispered.
âHow can I help you?â Hunter asked. âWait now, you donât want to do that!â
âWhatâs happening?â MacGregor shouted.
âStay in the car, John! Itâs alright. Heâs just confused.â
âHey! It cold! Just hey there, anyway.â
âPut that down!â Hunterâs voice was loud and high pitched. âGet back. Iâll shoot.â
There was a grunt and a groan of exertion. The sound continued. It was a struggle, MacGregor realized. MacGregor thought that he could hear Hunter gasp for air. MacGregor wanted to get out of the car, but Hunter had the HKâ¦
âGet off me!â Hunterâs voice was loud and commanding, âYou know what this is?â
âWhatâs happening?â MacGregor trembled. âEilidh? Whatâs goingâ¦â
There was a single crack. The unmistakable sound of the Heckler and Koch MP5 submachine gun firing.
âShit,â Hunter muttered.
There was another shot rapidly followed by another.
âEilidh!â
âI had to shoot him,â Hunterâs voice was shrill. âI⦠I couldnât get him off me.â
âGet back in the car,â MacGregor said. âHunter, get back in and letâs get out of here. What the fuck is wrong here?â
To his relief, Hunter jumped back into the car. The door slammed behind her. Her breathing was rapid and loud.
âWhat about the others?â MacGregor insisted, âAre theyâ¦â
âI killed him,â Hunter interrupted. âI shot him. I mean⦠I⦠I missed him with the first shot, but I was still trying to⦠I killed him. He grabbed hold of me. I didnât know what to do. I couldnât push him off.â
âYou did the right thing,â MacGregor said. âI donât know whatâs happening here, but you just have to do whatever you need to do. Thereâs noâ¦â
âHe was smiling at me,â Hunter continued speaking, ignoring MacGregorâs words. âHe looked like he was⦠happy. But he was hurting me, John. His hands were clawing into my shoulderâ¦â
âItâs alright.â
âI couldnât stop him,â Hunter said quietly. âI tried to, but I couldnât.â
âWe should get out of here. Find help.â
There was silence. Outside, one of the naked people was making a lot of noise.
âSomeone else is coming over,â Hunter said. âItâs the woman who was scrabbling at the windows.â
MacGregor noted that Hunterâs breathing had returned to normal. Her voice had regained its calm. He heard her door opening again. This time, he opened his own door.
âJohn!â
âIâm coming round,â he said.
A voice inside him kept saying that this was the wrong thing to do. The last thing he wanted to do was add more chaos to the situation. He kept his hands on the Mini as he worked his way round to Hunterâs side.
âIâm looking at something,â a strange voice said. âI looking at something.â
âYes, you are. But what are you all doing here?â Hunter said.
âIâm looking at something.â
It was a statement of fact, MacGregor thought. The woman was telling Hunter something. This second iteration had a subtle insistence that MacGregor found curious.
âYouâre looking at us?â he said.
Hunterâs left hand pulled him towards her.
âI am looking.â
âWhat are you looking for?â Hunter asked.
âIâm looking at something,â the voice sounded uncertain now. âBut I looking.â
âWhat is she looking at?â MacGregor whispered.
âRight into my eyes,â Hunter said evenly, âSheâs staring right into my eyes.â
âAsk herâ¦â
âWait,â Hunter interrupted, âwait a minute, John.â
He stopped talking. He could hear the strange woman breathing. It was rough and indiscreet, occasionally punctuated by a low moan or hum.
âShe doesnât have any jewelry. Rings, earrings, necklaces. And I canât see any scars.â
âI can see something!â the woman sounded exuberant. âI see what Iâm looking at.â
âYes, you can,â Hunter soothed. âAre you looking for us?â
âIâm looking at something.â
âShe doesnât have any scars. Sheâs got grazes on her knees and her elbows. Sheâs filthy. Her hair looks like itâs never⦠shit.â
âWhat?â
âLook out, thereâs another one coming over.â
âWe should get back in the car.â
âNot yet,â Hunter commanded, âwe need to get some air in these tires.â
âThere wonât be electricity,â MacGregor countered. âWe wonât be able to get power to the air hose.â
âNo, but with any luck theyâll have a foot pump somewhere inside. Itâs a pretty big garage. Has a restaurant, or a small café type place. Looks like they sold bikes, so we should beâ¦â
âWhat?â
âLook out, John!â
âIâm trying to touch you!â
It was a manâs voice. MacGregor turned round just as the rough hands started to grab hold of his jacket.
âOh fuck! Get off me!â
âIâm trying to touch you.â
Get the fuck off!â MacGregor found cold, bare skin. A hairy chest. He put both palms against the chest and pushed as hard as he could. On the second attempt he managed to dislodge his assailant.
âGet back in the car, John. Heâs coming back towards you.â
âIâm trying to touch you,â the manâs voice was monotonous and confused. âAnd thatâs all Iâm trying to do.â
MacGregor turned right. He found the Miniâs smooth bonnet. He didnât waste any time and followed it round to his open door. He groped his way into the car and closed the door behind him.
âCome on!â he shouted to Hunter, âGet in.â
âIâm trying to touch you.â
âWhy?â Hunter answered the naked woman. âWhat are you trying to do?â
âIâm looking!â the woman shouted. âIâm looking and I can see what Iâm looking at!â
MacGregor felt shivers run down his spine. The woman had screamed her words, almost hysterically. Now Hunter was back in the car and closing the door behind her. The car moved backwards rapidly. MacGregor felt the car reverse. Then, Hunter braked harshly.
âItâs just those two,â she said, âthe others donât seem to care about us.â
She sounded the horn, startling him.
âSorry.â
The horn blared long and loud.
âThereâs something really wrong with these people,â Hunter stated, still sounding the horn.
âThey donât sound sane. What could have happened here?â
âI donât know.â
She kept sounding the horn. It took about two minutes for the naked man and woman to walk across to the car. It seemed that they would become distracted when the horn stopped, resuming the others in milling around the petrol stationâs courtyard.
âOkay, Iâm going to drive into the courtyard. Then Iâm going to jump out of the car and take a quick look around inside for a pump.â
âBe careful. Take the gun. You should have about twenty five bullets left in it.â
âOh shit, the gun,â he heard a click. âI forgot to put the safety catch back on. Okay, here we go. Iâll be less than one minute, okay?â
âOkay.â
She pulled away at speed, swerving to avoid the wandering man and woman. As they passed by MacGregor heard both people calling out.
âThey say the same things over and over,â he commented.
Hunter didnât answer. The car came to a halt. She opened the door.
âDonât come after me!â she told him.
The door slammed shut before he could answer her.
He could hear the two voices calling out to Hunter. They were shouting the same words as before. MacGregor lowered his window to listen. Both voices kept repeating the same meaningless statements, but the tone held surprise and confusion.
âCome on, come onâ¦â he muttered to himself, âWhere is she?â
He could hear footsteps scuffling nearby. The air smelled of petrol. There were other, more unpleasant, odors. Rotting meat, excrement. The footsteps seemed to grow closer. He reached around to the back seat of the Mini and searched for the handgun. It wasnât lying where he expected it to be. He found the rucksack and began to probe it. He was surprised by the passenger door opening, but he sensed a faint aroma of lavender and jasmine and knew immediately who it was.
âDid you get it?â
âYes.â She closed the rear door and jumped into the driverâs seat again. âFoot pump and a couple of those puncture repair sealant tins.â
The car was moving again. Reversing, then turning in a wide arc out of the petrol station courtyard.
âIâll stop about a quarter mile away. We can pump the tires up. Iâll see if I can clean the windows a bit, too.â
âOkay,â MacGregor said. âI was going to mention that I couldnât see anything.â
âIâll stop driving just around the corner from the station. The roads are clear. Once weâre out of sight of... the naked people we can pump the tires up. I grabbed some new batteries for the walkie-talkie as well, just in case.â
âI donât think we need to worry about that. If weâre getting no radio stations then... well, I think everywhere is going to be the same.â
The Mini trundled along slowly. MacGregor, for the first time, could hear the deflated tires burring against the road.
âDo you have any family?â he asked. âIs anyone waiting for you?â
âMy partner,â Hunter replied, âMichael. Heâs in Glasgow. Back home.â
âYou live in Glasgow? I didnât realize. Where about are you?â
âWeâve got a flat near the station. Queens Street station, I mean.â
The car came to a slow halt.
âThis should do.â
âAre the tires alright? Sounded like we were almost driving on the rims a minute ago.â
âThe tires arenât that bad, but we need to pump them up. Think you can help?â
âYes.â
They got out the car. MacGregor felt apprehensive, but he didnât say anything. He trusted that Hunter would warn him before anything untoward happened. He made his way round to the front of the car. Hunter met him there.
âI can do it,â he said. âLet me have the pump.â
âOkay.â
She handed him the pump. It was a long bicycle foot pump with a smooth handle. He unscrewed the tire valveâs rubber cap and attached the foot pump. Hunter had moved off a short distance. He could hear her changing the batteries on the walkie talkie.
There was a momentâs hiss of escaping air, then MacGregor secured the foot pump to the tire.
âIâve got a bunch of batteries for this thing. So we can try it as often as we like. Once we get some air in the tires, Iâll drive south and you can keep calling out.â
âOkay,â he agreed, âIâll do that.â
He started to pump up the tire. After heâd pushed the piston up and down about a dozen times he called Hunter over to look at the gauge.
âAbout thirty psi,â she said. âIs that right?â
âI donât know. Itâs in the right area. Okay, thatâll do for that one. Next tire. Are you sure theyâre alright? It felt a bit bare.â
âIt probably wouldnât pass its MOT, but the tread will do for what we need.â
âWhat about bald spots? Brown patches?â
âThey look alright.â
He did the same thing with each tire. By the time heâd finished the second front tire, Hunter was making calls on the walkie-talkie. He was surprised that she would try at all. He had given up all hope of anyone replying to their transmissions.
âDo you think your partner is still alive?â
The thought had been bouncing around inside his head like a pinball trapped against the bumpers. The words came almost involuntarily, but he didnât regret them. He had to say it.
He connected the valve to the last tire and started pumping. It was hard work. This was more exercise than heâd given his arms in a long time. But he kept quiet and tried to keep his breathing from giving away how exhausting this was.
âThat oneâs looking good now,â Hunter commented. âWe can get going. Unless you want to stop for a rest?â
âIâm okay,â MacGregor puffed, âjust not used to the exercise.â
They got into the car. MacGregor found his way to the door and into the vehicle easier this time. He was getting used to the car. Hunter closed her door first. He followed suit. She started the engine and the car slowly moved off.