The Last: A Zombie Novel (33 page)

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Authors: Michael John Grist

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BOOK: The Last: A Zombie Novel
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She smiles shyly. She pops down to kneel beside me, placing her arm awkwardly around my back. The added weight presses down on my legs and hurts like a bitch, but I am so high on awe that I don't even grimace. I suck it up and kiss her.

"I'm so glad," she says softly, whispering against my cheek. "I was worried."

"Steady hand," I say. "Draw that in your latte and smoke it."

She laughs.

"You should add your tag too," I say. "LBA."

She grins and points. "I did. You can just see maybe, across his shoe."

I peer. I see it.

"Well-deserved."

 

 

We dredge and sieve a nearby pool for sand and pond scum, until it's relatively clean. We take two days to relax, spreading out the work of filling up the UFO cairn with material. We drink cold pi
ña coladas with freshly crushed ice, after hacking power to one of the icemakers, then think to add those same ingredients to the cairn. They can have coffee and cocktails, all those who follow on behind.

We lounge and sunbathe and recuperate. We drop in the warm pool water, now about halfway down the side thanks to evaporation, strongly redolent of chlorine, and walk up and down. It is rehabilitation for me. We take it in turns to carry each other around, held like rescued damsels, bobbing on the surface. We skinny-dip without shame.

At times we get drunk, giggling and trying on sunglasses naked in the lobby. We pose and lounge around like bohemians. We end up putting racks of sunglasses into the cairn, so others can share our fun. We make love lazily on the pool loungers, listening to soulful crooning from the Rat pack.

"What if someone comes now?" Lara asks, "and they see us like this?"

"We'll have a toga party," I answer. "Set up some disco balls. Party at the end of the world."

She presses her hot chest against my chest. My legs hurt less now, even with her weight. Getting them in the sun seems to help. They tan irregularly, the newly forming scar lines remain a tight white, but the inflammation is fading. 

"Do you really think there are others?" she asks.

"There have to be. I've seen two already. There must be more, hiding out there somewhere. Looking for us. They might be on the trail already."

She 'hmms' softly, starting to doze. I stroke her ringlet hair. It smells like coconuts, after we raided one of the expensive body-cream shops, and she had a crazy field day picking out a trolley full of beauty and cleansing products.

"It's not just for me," she'd protested when I rolled my eyes. "It's for the cairn."

It was a nice touch, I had to admit it. She made everything a lot prettier than I did. More welcoming and feminine I suppose. Mother and father, didn't somebody say that?

"Cerulean's out there too," I say softly, into her hair. She 'hmms' again.

Cerulean's out there.

 

 

After two days we pack up the convoy. I stand at Don's sword-marker grave, leaning on a fancy silver cane Lara found, and think about what I'd do if I found another person like him.

I don't know.

Perhaps if I'd just handed him the gun on the battle-tank, he would have looked it over and handed it back. We could have drunk whiskey or tea. I could have raised the issue of the cheerleaders later, shaming him less, adjusting his behavior gradually, and maybe he'd be here with us now, a valued member of the team. I could have helped him, maybe, and we might be friends.

But I couldn't know then. He might have turned the gun on me, and spent the next three days torturing me to death. He'd already let go of civilization the minute he started to have sex with the ocean. When he tied them up, when he dressed them for his own pleasure, when he raped them, he crossed a line. It didn't matter if anyone saw it or not.

I know better than any. There is a line out there in the wilderness, and once you cross it, the only way back is long, hard and lonely.

He crossed it. I crossed it too, but I pulled myself back. I don't know if he would have, though, or if he'd have wanted to. So I took the action I took, to protect myself and all of those to come behind.

I turn and walk away. The ocean rendered judgment in the end, and for that I'm grateful.

The JCB only has one seat, so I sit on the battle tank roof on my beanbag, strapped to the ceiling, as we roll out of Vegas. I don't feel jealous or possessive of this work anymore, I don't need to be in the driving seat or the one making the cairns. It's open-source for the masses now, and I don't own it. I wave goodbye to the hero on the UFO, and wonder what he'd think, if he saw what we'd done.

A corporation raised him up for profit, it's true, but I don't care about that. He was a hero to millions for his skill and his dedication, a symbol of perseverance as potent as any other, and he's a hero and a symbol still. Him and Pac-Man both.

"Goodbye Vegas!" Lara cries out from the cab.

"Yeeha!" I shout out. She echoes it. We're on the final cattle-drive home.

 

 

The ocean follow us down to the sea. It takes a few days, and we stop and take shelter in mansions set back from the road along the way. Some of them have front grounds that stretch for acres in dead brown grass, withered for lack of water. I know California is notoriously dry.

I walk more smoothly every day, in and out of dark kitchens as big as my whole apartment used to be. I brew us green tea.

"No art," I say, shrugging apologetically as I hand her a cup. "No foam."

Lara punches me in the shoulder.

"Argh, indicator hole," I wince.

She laughs.

I make 'fresh' bolognese with dried pasta, vine-ripe tomatoes from a sheltered part of the garden, using salt, pepper and wild-growing basil, with chips of dehydrated soy in place of meat. It tastes better than anything I've ever tasted.

"We can have whole fields of tomatoes," Lara muses, while we lie back on a massive balcony and watch the sun come up over the country. "Grapes too, there's plenty in California. Wine. We'll start up agriculture again."

"Fields of bolognese plants," I say. "I hear the soil is perfect for them."

She snorts. "That would be cows."

I lean back and savor the moment. "Fields of cow plants then. They'll be so cute when they bud."

She doesn't even snort. "There must be some we can round up. Fence them in again."

"Yeah. If the ocean haven't eaten them all."

"True. They ate their way through all my neighborhood's dogs."

"I'd like a dog," I say. "I'll call it Buddy."

"I'll have a cat," she muses. "And a horse."

We cuddle closer and nap. We drive on.

 

 

Los Angeles is a low gray sprawl. We come upon its suburbs gathered in the base of a low valley like receding ice at the pole, spreading out into a steady gray plateau of malls, condominiums, office parks, warehouses, and windowless buildings that could be CIA black sites or storage lockers or film studios.

We push through, down the same snake of road that has carried us like a river from New York, expanded now to eight lanes. We go under and over numerous other highways, each of them jetting off to other cities, spread across the country.

We hit downtown and stop in a tourist shop for maps, accompanied by the usual herd of floaters; maps to the stars in the Hollywood hills, maps to the various beaches, maps that show the Walk of Fame outside the Chinese theater.

We pull off I-15 and turn north along the coast. Everywhere there are dribs and drabs of the ocean, skinny and shriveled and gray, stumbling along the boardwalk and down to the beach. There they walk steadily to the water, and in.

"Jesus," Lara says. "They're really doing it."

She stops the convoy and we get out. We walk down to stand amongst them on the shore. They pass by us like falling snowflakes, oblivious, driven by some strange internal drive.

"Do you think they're going to drown?" Lara asks. "Was Don right?"

"No," I say. "I don't know, but I don't think so."

We watch them file one by one, like shooting stars across the beach, flaming out in the surf. They don't try to swim, and they don't carry on the waves. They walk until they go under.

"Maybe they fill with water," Lara says. "Then they walk along the ocean floor."

"So they don't need to breathe?"

"Maybe not. They always have breathed, I know. But maybe they don't need to."

I squeeze her hand. "I hope so."

I really do. I don't like to think of all these people, drowning themselves a few hundred yards away from where we stand. Surely the beach would be scattered with their washed-up bodies, if they were just dying.

"They're going somewhere," I say. "Maybe a better place."

We drive on. The Hollywood sign appears on the hills. We go past the Chinese theater the first time round without really noticing it. I only notice the stars on the sidewalk, glinting in the sun.

We pull back and park. We get out and stand before it.

"This is it," Lara says.

I nod. I root around inside myself, wondering what to feel. There's nothing strong, though. I half-expect to see a line of people swinging by the necks from the entranceway, an image Lara shared with me, but there are none.

We are the first. I feel pride at completing this mission. I have come across the whole country. I have fought, and learned, and survived, and now we stand on the precipice of something wondrous, the end of the yellow brick road.

People may come.

 

 

It takes one generator to fire up the projector in the largest premier screen, and one to run the sound, and one to run the coordinating computer system in the central office. We perform a rude hack to get it all working, but it works.

It's all digital now. In the storage room by flashlight we sift through the solid-state black bricks that contain movies.

"Gone with the Wind?" Lara suggests. 

"Put it on the pile."

"Ghostbusters?"

"Pile."

We heap them up. Already there's an audience of the ocean gathering in the theater, drawn by the sound and light. I guess these ones aren't quite ready to move on yet.

I keep hunting for the movie I've been waiting to see for years, one that was never screened, but must surely be ready. We don't find it in the theater, so we go on.

We find the studio that owned it, and dig through its campus. Every door we open releases floaters into the wild. We pass through cavernous dark studios, editing bays and offices, grand lobbies and storage rooms filled with old memorabilia, corridors lined with signed posters, busts of famous, long-dead actors, until in a central vault deep in the belly of the central building, I find it.

Ragnarok III. It comes on two bricks, and we carry one each.

"I don't even like these superhero movies that much," Lara says.

"It's not about liking," I say. "It's an event movie. We watch it like people used to go to church, to be together and listen to a sermon."

"That is dour."

"I do quite like them too," I add. "There's more spectacle than church."

We slot the first half of the movie into place in the Chinese theater's control room with a satisfying clunk, on August 23
rd
, 2018, at 1:15pm. It kicks into life with a pre-roll of ads and trailers. We pause it.  

We make popcorn in a microwave. We decant fizzy soda from the machines. We alter the strip line boards at the theater's front, sliding in the letters of our message.

LMA/LBA PRODUCTIONS PROUDLY PRESENTS:

RAGANAROK I, II & III TRIPLE BILL

WELCOME TO THE WEST COAST, SURVIVORS!

We settle down amidst the ocean, in the premium loveseats at the back, and watch the movie. It is great fun. The world is nearly destroyed, our heroes battle each other then unite, and all is relatively well in the end, with just enough mystery and threat left to hint at bigger and darker stories to come.

Afterward we stand at the entrance at sunset and look out over the actual ocean. It laps at the beach only yards away. Floaters flow out around us, heading down to the orange-dappled water like a tide of gray gazelle. We hold hands.

"They'll come," I say. "Cerulean will come."

Lara squeezes my hand. "Of course he will. The Last Mayor of America is handing out free coffee, who can resist that?"

I squeeze back.

We stand and watch the burning eye of the sun sink into the Pacific. I wonder if this is what the ocean are following, like devotees of the sun god Ra. Round and round the world they'll go, like a tidal flow, endlessly chasing the great bright light in the sky.

It makes me smile. It's no different than wildebeest roaming the plains or salmon swimming upstream. It's just another natural cycle, turning with the world.

We stand there a time longer, sipping bottled beer and thinking our own thoughts while the burnt sienna sunset fades atop the ocean, when a noise comes from down the coastal road. It is unmistakably an engine, drawing near.

Lara turns to me with wide eyes. I smile.

We fire up the front generators that power up fairy lights all round the Chinese theater's façade. We watch the headlights meander up the coast, always growing closer. My heart hammers with hope.

One of my RVs from New York pulls up. A man gets out. He's pale, his hair is close-cropped, and he stands at the door looking up at us with a broad grin on his face.

I spread my arms. "Welcome!" I say. 

There are tears in his eyes. "We didn't know if you'd be here," he says. He looks at us in turn. "Amo. Lara. Look at this."

The door to the side of the RV opens, and someone else gets out. It's a little girl, a redhead wearing a sparkly blue princess dress. She's followed by an elderly woman, who is assisted by a dark-haired young man and an Asian woman in camouflage gear. A floater washes past them and not a one of them draws a weapon or shows any sign of fear. I feel such pride.

Then someone else comes. The RV back doors open, they all go over to help, and my heart leaps in my chest.

They lift out a wheelchair. In it is my friend, grinning like a madman, crying like all of us.

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