Read The Risen: Courage Online

Authors: Marie F Crow

The Risen: Courage (2 page)

BOOK: The Risen: Courage
6.77Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
CHAPTER
2

T
here are footsteps running towards us as the sun races against time with each bright ray it casts over the earth. Paula’s face is sculpted into one of neutral compassion. She wears it like a shield, protecting her from what she has to do. It protects her emotions from the carnage around her that her duty requires to dive deep. Every shattered life is a life she once held in her heart. A heart fighting against a calm exterior with every beat it creates.

Our eyes connect as she kneels down next to Aimes, and all sounds vanish in our silent communication. She is drawing out the moments left to her before seeing what is waiting. It is not just Aimes that she is avoiding, but also the men that are breaking in front of her as well.

What lingers in our nightmares is not always the obvious. Sometimes it is the little things, the little sounds and smells that will torment our minds long after the memories are made. This is one of those memories, and we are both trying to avoid as much storage of it as we can. As our eyes disconnect, the sounds pour forth again, and it is crippling as time continues to seep away.

There is nothing I can do for my childhood friend, and like a coward, I turn from her not wanting to hold the sight of her in my mind. My heart flutters with the pain of possibly losing her. I once prayed I would give anything for Lawless’ return, but I never thought it would cost me her. We never really know who is truly listening to our prayers and who will call our bluffs.

I move to the only victim left without an active aide, Ross. Ross’ eyes are dulled by his pain. They watch me from behind a thick haze of disinterest. He expects no help from those around him. He has already accepted his death with that realization. Watching him float on consciousness with fluttering eyes, I finally feel pity for the man who so many have used for their own goals and ambitions. These same people who now have forgotten him with the depths of their suffering.

Their goals and ambitions awoke beasts in men, causing a full circle of torment that Karma knows so well. This wheel is her world. She spins it as well as the Fates do with their golden scissors perched for the inevitable. Just like the Fates, she can cut lives short with her own reasons and justifications. She never asks, nor needs, to hear ours.

Ross’ shirt is soaked with the blood from the wound to his stomach. The shirt no longer absorbs or blocks any of the blood that his heart beats in vain to produce. His heart is too stubborn to admit defeat, and with its refusal, the blood continues to slip away. It seems impossible that there is any left in his body with so much weighing heavily on the fabric of his clothing, turning the color of his shirt into a thick, dark, irregular cloud.

“I never meant….” Ross’ face contorts with pain, locking the words on his tongue. He doesn’t have to finish his thoughts. He knows I understand. He just needs to hear my words of acceptance to ease a different type of suffering he is feeling.

“I know. No one is innocent anymore, Ross. We have each made our mistakes thinking it was for the best for our own people and our own needs. None of us stopped to think what it might do to the other.” I give him the full weight of my gaze. He deserves at least that much.

This man has been put in the middle of everyone’s plotting. He has been used more than a pawn in a chess game; only his side was never a clear color of black or white. Their actions made him grey with blurred alliances and mistrust from both sides. Ross’ shoulders were not used to bearing the weight of the blame. They were just used to carry the load that others were too afraid to carry themselves. This man who gave up his ego so long ago in the simple attempt to save lives now sits with his life being forgotten.

My hands press against the wound of his stomach and instantly the thick blood flows over them, coating them like vinyl gloves with a thick shine. Pressing firmly forces more to flow through my fingers like warm, wet sand. It flows with a life of its own, filling in the crevices and fine lines as it fights to escape. Everything about Ross is weary from the constant abuse and he is ready to let go.

“It’s not so bad.” My voice is barely a whisper, and with the strength of a feather, it holds no convincing powers.

“It’s not so bad” is the same as telling someone “I’m fine”. These statements are uttered when, in fact, things are very bad and nothing is fine. This is what we say when we do not hold the strength to admit how very bad everything really is. This is all very bad, and he is not fine. However, you never admit that to people. White lies are at their finest in moments of deep dread and desperation.

“I’ve got it. Go help Aimes.” The voice above me is cold and empty where warmth and laughter vibrated only moments ago. Moments that now feel like days lost when we all stood celebrating his life.

Lawless’ hand rests flat on my shoulder, pulling me away from Ross. It once touched me with kindness, but now it only holds authority. The void of his normal personality frightens me. It inspires no trust in me to leave Ross with him. It only warns of what is to come.

“I can save him,” I hiss through my clamped teeth.

“Hells...” Marxx echoes the same tone conveying the same statement that Lawless spoke. Ross’ clock has run out. Promises are about to be kept.

“It’s too late, Hells. Go help with Aimes.” Lawless’ tone holds no room for arguments, but when did that ever matter to me?

I have faced bigger monsters than Lawless and won. He may be the “prodigal son”, but he doesn’t carry the same bat as Daddy.

I ask him, “You want me to just let him die? Just to turn my back on what you are about to do?” If he wants to intimidate me, he is going to have to bring a bigger stick.

My face must have shown my defiance as Ross and I stare at one another. A simple shake of his head tells me of his acceptance and I feel my heart break. I cry for Ross. I cry for a man no one else has taken the time to comfort. He reaches to touch my cheek, seeking the proof his eyes are telling him, and I feel a new trail from his fingertips. I bless his death with my tears. He blesses me with his blood.

“I want you to walk away, now,” he says. Lawless has missed our silent exchange. He will think he has won this round, but Ross and I know different. We will always hold the truth like a guarded secret long after he is gone.

With my final good-bye, I place a soft kiss upon lips that once smiled brighter than the noon sun. “I forgive you,” I whisper to those lips, and I leave him with Lawless and Marxx.

I don’t glance back. I don’t spare him the anger of those who surround him. My cowardice shames me.

“I promised you I would kill you one day.” I hear Lawless tell him.

It’s not the comforting good-bye I had left Ross with, but it is what Ross’ last moments are. Those words and the long black barrel of Lawless’ gun are his farewell from this world.

The shot echoes and I feel my whole body flinch with it as if it were I under that barrel. I cry, not for the man who led us into that trap of a store, but for the man who I met that first day at the Welcome Center. The man who another had left behind, too concerned with his own safety. A man who continued to find himself placed between the two warring sides, never finding some place for himself. His shaggy brown hair that day hinted at the stress he was put through and continued to show the wear of never really being allowed in on either side of the battle. Did I seal his fate that first day we met or was it Simon, Dolph, and Richard under an abandoned strip mall? Either way, another name is signed to the list of the dead. A list that is still growing and I am not sure if I have the courage to keep writing.

CHAPTER
3

T
here is only one left from J.D.’s madness. With how well Death is winning this game, I am not sure I want to play anymore. How do you beg Death for mercy? What flag do you wave signaling your surrender? Where is my pause button so I can hide for just a few moments? Life isn’t equipped with those, and Death really doesn’t care if you are unable to go on.

The steps between my friend and I seem to multiply by four with every two I take. My feet are weighing heavily with fear’s quicksand. J.D.’s blank, begging eyes swim before mine. Carol’s twisted body at the bottom of the stairs flashes before me. Ashley, with her innocence over-run by evil, falls again before my eyes. I can hear Conroy’s screams for help like the roar of an ocean in my ears. Lilly, with her missing center, is staring at me surrounded by the halo of her death. With Aimes’ image added to its pages, would my portfolio of failures now be complete?

With a firm voice to reach the wrecked minds of Rhett and Chapel, Paula is giving instructions attempting to turn them into her assistants. They have exposed Aimes’ upper body to gather a better idea of the damage. Rhett’s eyes refuse to rest upon her with his unease over the exposure. They dart from the black bag of tools of Paula’s trade, back to Aimes, never lingering longer than needed to fulfill the task set to him. It’s endearing to see him falter so if it were not for the circumstances around it.

Aimes would marvel in the fact of finally being the source of his discomfort. Her quick wit would dance with comments. Instead she is silent, grey, and the shocking contrast of it only adds to the fears that flutter inside me. All the times I have wished for her silence I would take them all back for just one bubble gum scented, smart-ass remark. Just for one eye roll giving finality to any argument with her silently expressed point of view. Please, God, don’t take my friend. Please, don’t deny me the chance to say the words that I have never said to her. I don’t need to hold her memories in the days that are left for me. I need to hold her hand.

The white lace of her bra adds a frail beauty to the singed circle on her flesh. Paula’s examination allows red rivers to flow into her cleavage, pooling around pale flesh before slipping free to cascade to the tiles around her body. The contrast of colors between the rivers of blood and her skin’s tone stirs my soul to panic. The very imagery I was seeking to avoid with my weakness is laid before me, taunting me. I know if she dies here today on this cold floor, the memory of her fall will come find me tonight. It will replay a thousand times with my mind’s wickedness.

“Paula?” My voice holds the questions my tongue won’t form.

“I don’t know. If I dig to retrieve it, I will cause more damage. Did it pass through anything?” Paula is not exaggerating about the damage risk. With each new twist or tug of the singed circle, more rivers form with different speeds and currents.

“No. Clean shot.” Rhett’s voice is the weakest I have ever heard. His coloring seems to be fading as the reds grow bolder.

“You are
absolutely
sure of that?” Paula asks. I can see some of the tension loosening from Paula’s shoulders. The grim press of her lips is relaxing, allowing color to slowly return to them.

Rhett and Chapel only nod. They are not sure if she is relaxing because of good news or if she is giving up. The weightlessness in my knees is also afraid of her answer. The room is tilting as I wonder if Death is again dancing in victory.

Strong arms circle my waist. The man I feared was lost to me now supports us both in our moment of fear-laced truth that awaits the future of our friend. I wonder if J.D. is holding his breath with worry over what awaits her. In his moment of hell, did he know the outcome of his madness, or was he able to escape the knowledge of where his shots landed? I know without a doubt one of us joined the ranks of hell today. The only thing uncertain is if heaven will gain one too.

“I can’t lose her.” I whisper to Lawless, who is the only thing keeping me standing.

There is no return reply, just his arms that hold me a little tighter and a head that rests a little heavier on my shoulder.

Paula is either ignoring us on purpose, or has completely forgotten us with her concentration. She has taken the bag from Rhett, placing Chapel’s hand over Aimes’ wound with thick, white gauze. I want to assume this is a good thing. She wouldn’t waste resources if Aimes was past saving, would she?

Marxx seeing Rhett’s distress is giving him silent support with one hand on his shoulder while we wait. Rhett is a ticking time bomb of rage on normal days. Not even Marxx knows what to expect from his brother this dawn if we lose Aimes.

So much betrayal and pain has been placed before Rhett, and when the tears settle, there are no promises of how Rhett will handle it. We are a huddled group awaiting news of our pixie, surrounded by the wails of those already mourning the ones they have lost. How will any of us handle what today has brought?

“I think she will make it even with the blood loss. If it was a clean shot, with no added debris other than a small piece of fabric from her shirt, then the heat from the bullet will cauterize any vessels it landed near and sterilize the actual shot. From what I can see, the path didn’t hit anything vital, but I will keep a close eye on her. If an infection doesn’t set in, there is no reason she won’t recover completely,” Paula says, wasting no time in moving to stitching the wound. She lets her words float in the air, waiting for them to sink in with each one of us as a smile sneaks upon her face.

Aimes is going to be fine. It will be a slow recovery, but she is going to be fine! A slow smile of praise spreads to us as reactions vary. Chapel’s head bends back, gazing at the ceiling with silent prayers of thanks to a God he still holds close. Rhett’s head comes down and his body hangs limply with his fear and tension released. Marxx pats Rhett’s back with his silent emotions expressed in comfort to his brother. Lawless and I are a silent world of nerves as we cling to each other with love for our friend. No one is brave enough to utter a word that risks breaking the first small strand of hope on this once happy holiday.

“We aren’t out of the woods yet. She has lost a lot of blood and is very weak. Soon as I finish these stitches, we need to move her downstairs where she can rest and I can keep a better eye on her. If an infection is going to set in, we will know it by tonight.” Paula has never sugarcoated her words. She isn’t going to sprinkle sweetness now.

“Just say when,” Rhett says, moving the position of his body to support Aimes’ fragile weight.

“Isn’t this just perfect.” The voice chills the celebration. Dolph, covered in his own red horror story, is standing near us holding a look that fills his face with a fire of injustice. “J.D. - your leader - kills over half of us but his little pink princess lives. I’m sure all those crying over their dead will be so comforted to hear the news.” Dolph’s anger is pulsing with heat and it covers each word with bitterness. All the shyness has left the man with his emotions being a knot of torment.

“Aimes had nothing to do with this. There is no reason to place this on her,” Paula says. She is not the only one stunned by Dolph’s words. Unfortunately, the moment she used to reprimand Dolph, allowed Rhett to recover.

“Anything they say to the news, you just let me know. I’ll have a nice talk with them right after you and I finish our little chat,” Rhett says. There is no mistaking the innuendos that Rhett alludes to. If there are, the shading of his eyes and expression on his face will clear them up.

“If you’ll excuse us, we have to take our princess downstairs. I’ll be back with shovels for your queen,” Lawless says. He knew the reaction his words would stir. He had already left my side to block Dolph’s path to me with his body.

Dolph’s anger erupts as he rushes towards Lawless. He swings with his closed fist and wide-open eyes like a man possessed. Lawless, having learned a lot about the man from their little boxing match in the gym, is able to dodge the attack. He lands his jabs upon Dolph’s body as he moves, stealing the air from his lungs. They don’t fight against Chapel separating them after the first round is exchanged as they once did. Their anger is of a different type, but the look in their eyes radiates the same hatred for the other.

“Let us get Aimes to safety. Then, we will come back. We will help. We will help with it all,” Chapel says. He seeks to soothe the ache of so many deaths caused by our leader and the damage from Lawless’ hateful words.

“If Simon had never accepted your help to begin with, this would never have happened! Why the hell would we want to accept it now?” Dolph’s question finds no answers from Chapel, and with a shove to the only man trying to help, Dolph walks back to Simon who is still mourning the loss of his wife and child.

“He’s right,” Chapel, the bearer of all things guilt-related, says with remorse. “All of this, it’s our fault. I thought at the time it would have been harsher to loot them and let them go than to come and see what was here. I was wrong.”

“The fault rests with J.D., God rest his soul, not with you. Not with any of you. You would think you would understand the difference between the truth and words said in anger with how your group carries on.” Ah, there is that cold slap we have come to expect from Paula’s words. She says, “Let’s get this girl downstairs before Lawless provokes anymore unnecessary mayhem.”

The look she gives Lawless is one well rehearsed from many years of mothering. She motions for Rhett to lift Aimes’ unconscious body and he does so, letting his anger melt away with each inch he lifts with her in his arms. His eyes grow bright with his tears as he gazes down at her. Until now, I held no knowledge of how deeply he felt for her.

With my own glare to Lawless for what just happened, I follow Rhett and Paula down a hallway I wish I could avoid. I focus on the blood that falls to the floor with the delicacy of rose petals shaken from a flower. It leaves a red trail in their wake that I do my best to step around it. Step on a crack; break your mothers back. If you step on your friend’s blood, what becomes of that?

I close my senses to the many broken bodies that still lay about. I ignore the ones huddled in mournful embraces and blaming eyes as Chapel’s words keep repeating in my mind. With each death I pass, I wonder if it is another sin added to my soul.

Is all of this our fault? If we had let J.D. have his fun then, would they be suffering now? If his simple ego was appeased back at the Welcome Center, would there have been a need for it to be appeased here at the school? Paula said this was J.D.’s fault, but I am starting to agree with Chapel. It was not J.D. who wanted to be here. He wanted to leave, but I stopped him. I kept them here when they were so close to leaving, and these innocent people could have escaped his wrath. I thought Aimes was going to be the last entry into my portfolio of failures, but with each body I pass, the pages grow along with the nightmares that will haunt me.

Our eyes are rimmed with red. Our hands are soaked in red. We have spread red to every thing we have touched. We are covered and surrounded by the deaths of those we knew. Like flowers at a headstone, the red stains will always serve as a silent reminder of what has happened here today. As the moans mount, I am signaling my surrender. Death has won the game. He has defeated us almost completely. I truly hope it is now over. I only hope he will let us hold onto the one small victory Rhett clutches in his arms as we begin to descend into the lower level of the high school.

BOOK: The Risen: Courage
6.77Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Stealing Third by Marta Brown
East of the Sun by Julia Gregson
Broken by Kelley Armstrong
Place in the City by Howard Fast
Gone Country by James, Lorelei
Looking for Alibrandi by Melina Marchetta