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View Full Version : Beyond the Grave (Working Title): Sequel to the Graveyard



Doroschuk
02-16-2012, 04:22 PM
Chapter 1: Resurrection

The patient opened his eyes slowly, groaning at the soreness in his chest. Walking over beside the table, the Doctor bent down and felt the patients head. The patient sat up in the table, and rested on his elbows, breathing heavily from the pain in his chest. The doctor leaned back in his wooden rolling chair, and supported his head on his right hand.

“Good morning sleeping beauty,” he said, smiling under his gray mustache, “it’s good to see you amongst the living my friend.”

“Where am I?” the patient asked, unable to recognize the make-shift surgery room he was in, and the small home that housed it.

“217 Burkeley Avenue,” was the reply, “or to be less specific, the old city of Boulder Colorado.” He stroked his mustache as he watched the patient slowly mull that name over in his head.

“Does the name Denver mean anything to you?” the patient asked, massaging his aching head.

“Denver,” the Doctor replied, “Yes, that’s the old capital of Colorado, where my assistant found you, lying half-dead in the dust, with nary a bullet but the one in your chest.” The patient clutched his chest.

“I was shot?” he asked, a little shocked.

“Indeed,” the Doctor replied, “right in the middle of the chest. When my assistant found you, most of your clothes were gone, and whatever supplies you had had been taken…Everything except that thing around your neck.” The patient felt his necklace, unsure what it was himself. He saw that it was a metallic thing, a key of sorts, but different than he remembered ever seeing. But he thought little of it, instead returning his attention to his current situation.

“Where’s this assistant of yours?” the patient asked.

“Out patrolling the country-side.” the Doctor replied, “We have three horses, and he takes his out every day and watches the outlying region. He happened to have gone down I-20, towards Denver when he heard the gunfire. When he arrived, he found your body lying stripped on the cracked asphalt. Lucky for you, he felt a pulse, and couldn’t bring himself to just leave you out in the cold. So he brought you back… He’s a good kid, Christopher, he tries hard, you know?”

“No, I don’t really.” The patient laid back down on the surgery table. The Doctor leaned forward in his chair.

“I never got your name. Mine’s Doc Harrison, by the way.”
The patient, staring at the ceiling fan, brushed a hand through his brown hair.

“I can’t remember,” he replied, saying it as much to himself as he was to the doctor, “I really can’t.”

“Well,” Doc Harrison scratched his head, “you look like a strong fellow, so until we can figure out your name, I’ll just call you John.” The patient nodded his head.

“John’ll do, for now at least,” He sighed deeply and massaged his temples, “I can’t remember anything from before…” he tapered off, laying back down and groaning from the sharp pain still present in his chest. There was a long pause as the doctor waited to see if anything came to his patient’s mind.

“It’s good you’re up now,” the doctor said, realizing John couldn’t recall anything, “I was praying I wouldn’t have to leave you.” The patient sat up.

“Leave me?” he asked quickly, a look of confusion on his tanned face.

“Yes,” Doctor Harrison replied, “a scavenger came through town not but two days ago. He was ranting about some settlements he’d seen up north, in Wyoming, said there’s an army coming down, aiming to take Denver. Looking for something important, he said. Now I don’t want nothing to do with nobody looking for nothing, you hear? I’m a humble doctor trying to survive out in these wastes. I’ve heard about these fellas; technology hoarders or somethin’. I’ve heard a few things about ‘em, and I know for one they don’t take too kind to us wasteland folk. They think they’re better than others, kinda like most bunker-borns, but they terminate any wastelanders they find with extreme prejudice.”

“Bunker-born,” John scratched his head, “what’s that mean?”

“Oh,” the doctor seemed a little surprised, “well a bunker-born is literally someone who is born in one of the old war bunkers.”

“War bunkers?”

“A lot of people had built underground bunkers during the cold war of the twentieth century, and even more were built during the paranoia years of the late twenty-first. But these bunkers were organized, much bigger. Families could fit in the older bunkers; the new ones were built to house whole communities. So when the sky fell, a hell of a lot of people moved into those bunkers real quick-like.”

“Now the government,” he continued, “had announced that in the case of nuclear war, one-hundred years would be the minimum amount of time before the land would be habitable again. Of course, nobody knows exactly what it was that came down from the sky and crushed the world’s nations, but we know it didn’t use nuclear devices. All the fallout from that Cataclysm came from America and nations like its attempts to fight back. Most of the older wasters know all this, but the young’ns, they don’t pay much heed to what happened; they care about what is. And I don’t blame ‘em. It’s a tough world out there; you’re a shining example of that.”

“How can you tell a bunker-born from a regular wastelander?” John asked inquisitively.

“Well to finish my story, after about a hundred years people started coming out of those giant bunkers. The smaller ones had been vacated years before when the supplies had run low, the newer bunkers had a much greater capacity for supplies, so they lasted a lot longer even though they had much more people. When they came out into the wasteland, they saw that everyone had become darker-skinned genetically, and they seemed like a cruel, barbaric folk to the bunker-born. Well the bunker-folk, seeing their pale skin and light hair compared to the wastelanders, were quick to segregate themselves from their new-found neighbors. Almost universally they developed farming communities outside of their old bunkers, and were quick to wall of their new settlements.”

“So in essence,” he began to conclude, “the bunker-borns are, as a rule, introverts, who hate the wasteland and its people. They’re easily recognizable by their light complexion and hair color. Wastelanders hate ‘em, and the feeling is mutual, but they leave each other well alone. Now this army up north, those fellas aren’t so friendly with the wastelanders either, but they’re much more trigger-happy than the bunker-folk.”

“So if they’re coming here,” John said, “then we need to leave soon.”

“Yes,” the doctor replied, “they’ll be in Boulder by week’s end, and soon enough they’ll clear out Denver. And I ain’t gonna be here when that happens…Now come on, we should get you dressed for dinner, Christopher will be back soon,” he looked at his wrist-watch, “real soon.” He turned towards the kitchen as John got up from the surgery table and walked awkwardly behind him.

Just then, in all coincidence, the sound of hooves became noticeable outside. Only one horse; it was Christopher. Dr. Harrison turned around quickly and walked back towards John, who had found some undergarments lain out for him. The doctor leaned in closely.

“Just a heads-up,” he said, in a loud whisper, “Christopher is a bunker-born, but he ain’t like the usual ones. He’s a good kid, just don’t look at him too much, it’s pretty…noticeable.”

John put on a white t-shirt and a pair of brown slacks. He saw the doctor unlock the door, and soon afterwards Christopher entered the small-house, he saw what the doctor had meant by “noticeable”. Underneath a cowboy hat and a thick, weathered duster, fingerless gloves, dusty jeans, long boots, and a revolver, there was a small young man whose skin was almost white, and whose hair, peeking out from under the wide-brimmed hat, was a light blonde. Behind dark sunglasses and an intelligent smirk were light gray eyes, young and vibrant, but haunted by a sort of harshness, almost anger, though kept in check by the young man’s skillful poker-face.

“Looks like our boy’s awake, Doc,” he said, whipping off his sunglasses and turning towards the doctor, “can we leave now?” Dr. Harrison snorted and walked over to the kitchen shaking his head.

“Our guest,” he said, pulling out dishes from the cabinet, “needs some time to recover. He needs food and rest.” Then the doctor gave his assistant a harsh look, “We’re staying the night; we’ll move out tomorrow.” Christopher walked over to the table, clearly annoyed.

“Dammit, Doc, if I hadn’t brought him here we’d have been gone three days ago.”

“But now we have a new hand, if he’ll stick around.” John turned towards the doctor.

“It’s the least I could do, Doc,” he said, “for all you’ve done for me.” He brushed his hand across his chest. Christopher noticed this movement.

“Doc’s the best in the land,” he said, “mostly by default, but he’s one of the best anyway of he can keep your *** alive.” He leaned up against the wall, putting his hat on a peg and removing his duster, and hanging it up on the coat-rack.

“You gotta name?” he said, looking as tough as he could.

“Call me John,” was the reply. John was a bigger man than the assistant, older too, but not by much. Christopher looked to be an older teenager, maybe in his early twenties, while John was about twenty-six. He was a tall man, not as tall as Christopher, but better built, while the other was thin and lanky. John felt his chin, and though he expected a beard, he felt no hair. He must have been shaven by the doctor. He smiled.

“You must be Christopher,” he said, walking towards the cowboy, extending his hand politely.

“You haven’t earned a handshake, John,” Christopher said scathingly, “and it’s Chris.”

John put his hand down, returning the look with a serious one, and they both eyed each other for a few moments. Finally the doctor broke the engagement.

“Dinner’s ready, kids,” he said, “take a seat.” The two broke eye-contact and went over to the table. Sitting down, the doctor brought them their dinner, buttered toast and assorted fruits.

“No meat?” Christopher asked.

“No,” the doctor replied, “I didn’t want the smoke to attract any new guests. There’s a lot of men moving in soon and I don’t want any scouts to catch whiff of us.”

“Now,” the doctor said, noticing that John had begun reaching for food, “let’s say grace.”

John, feeling both confused and slightly embarrassed, put the apple he had grabbed down. The doctor closed his eyes and bowed his head.

“Our father, who art in heaven, hallowed by Thy name. Thy Kingdom come, Thy will be done, on Earth as it is in Heaven. And give us this day, our daily bread, and forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us. And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil, for thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory. Amen.”

“Oh, and Lord,” he added, “grant us safe passage along the hard road tomorrow and the days to come. Amen.”

Then he opened his eyes and began to eat his light meal. The other two followed. The meal was quick, and shared in relative silence. Following dinner, the doctor put all of the locks on the door and checked the bars across the windows. After completing his inspection, Dr. Harrison looked over at the two men who sat at the table, finishing their meals.

“It’s time to get some shut-eye fellas. Big day tomorrow, we’ll be rising early.”

The two at the table finished their dinner, and prepared for bed. The doctor went over to this desk in the corner, where he kept an oil lamp and his journal. He stayed there for a long time as the others slowly crept towards bed.

“Sleep there,” Christopher said, pointing to a dingy mattress on the floor, “Here’s some sheets and a pillow. Get healthy; we need you ready for anything tomorrow.” He then retreated to his hammock in the other corner, and promptly fell asleep. The red sun slowly fell over the mountains, and night fell upon the wastes. John, lying beneath his sheets on the mattress, watched the Doctor writing in that journal for what felt like hours before sleep finally overtook him.

The sun came up in the early morning, and John awoke to the doctor and his assistant both finishing packing up the house’s valuables. He rose from his bed, and walked over towards the window. Dr. Harrison, seeing his patient was awake, tossed him an apple.

“Breakfast,” he said, and walked back to his work. As John finished the apple, the other two finished the packing. Seeing that everything was done, the doctor went over to John and offered him some new clothing. He handed him some blue jeans, socks, boots, a brown leather jacket, a holster, and finally, a 9 millimeter pistol. John inspected it, counting the bullets and placing them back in the magazine. He then sheathed the gun in his holster, and followed the doctor and his assistant as they walked out the back door.

Outside was a covered wagon filled with items both of the survival and trinket sort. John shielded his eyes from that bloody sun as his partners went to the makeshift stables, and brought out two large mustangs, one chestnut and the other a darker brown. They brought them over to the wagon and tied them out front. Everything was ready, and the doctor got up on his seat.

“John,” he shouted, “you ride shotgun.” John followed the order and sat next to the man who had saved his life just the day before. He saw that the doctor was carrying a long rifle, he didn’t know what kind. Christopher walked around the front and readied his own steed for the journey. As the wagon rounded the corner of the house, Christopher saw something on the horizon.

“Doc!” he yelled, “I think we’ve got visitors.” He took out his gun as John and the doctor followed him. Walking in a jagged line, the three crossed the field towards their “visitors”. Closing in on them, they saw that there were three men, lightly armed, coming towards them.

“Don’t come any closer!” Doc Harrison shouted, waving his rifle in the air. But the opposing group continued to advance. The doctor signaled to his companions to halt, and he walked a few paces ahead. Firing a warning shot in the air, he received one back, but much closer to his head.

“Get down!” he shouted, kneeling down and aiming his rifle. The other two followed suit.

“Don’t waste your ammo; wait for them to get close. One and done, got it?”
He looked back, and the other two nodded. As the men got closer, the doctor aimed downfield and took a shot. The man in the center fell backwards. Then the man on the right of the doctor pulled something off his belt, and chucked it towards the group.

“Grenade!” the doctor shouted, jumping towards his left. John did the same, and Christopher moved right. The grenade exploded, and John saw Christopher hit the ground hard, but he couldn’t stop to check on him. Moving closer, John got the man on the far left in his sights, and fired his gun, hitting the man in the forehead.

“Good shot!” the doctor shouted. John, seeing the last assailant attempting to finish the job, ran towards Christopher. The man prepared to shoot the assistant, but John squeezed his trigger first. The man went down, and John continuedrunning towards the man who had rescued him from the wastes.

“Christopher!” John shouted.

“Yeah?” came the weak reply. John slowed his pace, wiping the sweat from his head with a happy sigh. He bent over Christopher, and offered his hand. A grin slowly appeared on the young man’s face, and he grabbed his new companion’s hand. Lifting him off the ground, John patted Christopher on the back.

“Hey,” the blonde-headed man said quietly, “You earned that one.”

John grinned, and the two walked over towards the last body, following the doctor. The doctor was well ahead of them, but they saw that the man, bleeding from his shoulder, was begging for his life. Dr. Harrison kneeled down and whispered something into the man’s ear. The wounded man began to shout out an answer to whatever question the doctor posed, and Harrison stood up. He pointed his gun down, and the man began to scream, reaching for the gun, but the doctor pulled the trigger, ending his foe’s life.
He turned around to face his companions, who stopped short, seeing the cold hardness of the doctor’s eyes.

“Search the bodies, take anything useful.”

The two followed the orders without question.

Doroschuk
02-17-2012, 09:09 PM
The two younger men looted the three bodies while Doc Harrison made his way back to the wagon. The men who had attacked them were obviously scavengers; their packs were full of trinkets and items of little use. They were all long-haired and bearded, probably from long weeks of travel on foot from the more forested regions in the north. John and Christopher took their time; watching as the older man limped slowly back to his vehicle.

He limped. John had never noticed that. Probably because he hadn’t seen him walk more than a few feet until now; in fact, when they had been moving towards the looters, he seemed to look much stronger, and there was no noticeable limp. John scratched his head as he found an interesting item on the scavenger he had saved Christopher from.

“Look,” he said, turning towards the doctor’s assistant, “grenade.” He held it up so his companion could see, and the other young man wiped his hand across his head, and then returned to searching his own man. John, having collected the gun, bullets, water, food, and grenade from the scavenger, stood up and went back over to Christopher.

“Chris,” he said, using the name the young man had requested, “my head’s a little clearer now…you know after this little…eh…skirmish.” He looked up at the blonde-headed man, who was checking a gun he had found. Chris looked up.

“What do you mean?” he said quickly, making eye-contact, but quickly breaking it.

“I mean,” John replied, “that I’ve been going along with all this without much question, you know? I mean there’s so much stuff I don’t know right now, but I’m just following you and the good doctor on nothing but a notion of survival. I don’t know who you guys are, I don’t know where this place is… I don’t even know who I am, dammit!”

There was a pause as John stopped to massage his temples. Chris, annoyed by the barrage of questions, stood up slowly, having forgotten his man. John looked him in the eyes.

“In fact,” he said, “I don’t even know where we’re going…” he trailed off, and wiped a hand through his hair. Christopher looked at him through those light gray eyes, staring him down in his duster and cowboy hat.

“Look,” he said finally, “I don’t know who you are, and I don’t know where you come from, but I can tell, just as well as the Doc, that you’re handy with a gun and can use your hands. This is the wastes, in case you haven’t noticed. If you don’t put your life in the hands of others, you die. In fact, even when you do trust others, you’re still just about as likely to die, ‘cause this place is hell. The reason you want to trust the doctor is ‘cause he saved your life. The reason I trust you is ‘cause you saved mine. Maybe I can return the favor one day, but for now, I trust you, but I don’t like you.”

He looked over at the wagon, seeing that the doctor had finally made his way to it, and wiped his gloved hands against his pant legs.

“Let’s go,” he said.

“Where?” John asked, not moving from his spot. Christopher turned around, clearly annoyed.

“We’re going down south,” was all he said before turning back around and heading towards the wagon. John, satisfied that he at least got an answer, followed him closely behind. The wind blew across the prairie as the two made their way back to the covered wagon, the doctor waiting patiently for his two young companions.

He wondered why they had taken so long. Perhaps there was a lot of items on the looters, or maybe Christopher needed a little time to sit and recover from the blast. No, he thought, of course that’s not it. His tired eyes squinted in the wind; the sun, peeping more than halfway over the crest of the world, shone down on his shiny, bald head. No, that’s not it. He knew they had seen what he had done to that man: killed him in cold blood.

He moved his hand across his head, thinking about the world. Had it really made him that kind of man? Cruel…merciless…a killer? The scavenger had begged for his life; his meaningless, useless life. But why did he not grant that one wish to the man? Let him die out on the prairie, let the blood be on the land, and not on his hands. Was it mercy? he thought. No, it was the way of this new world, this wasteland, this hell. He was a doctor, and he knew it. His job was to help people, not end their lives.

He had asked the boy a question. Is the horde near? All he had gotten back was babble. Foolish babble. He sighed. Stupid wastelanders, throwing their lives away. Fools, every last one of them. He was doing the world a favor by ending their lives. Yes, a favor; a service to an unknown society.

But he stopped thinking about it. His assistant and the patient approached the wagon silently.

“Hopefully,” the doctor said, “there won’t be any more distractions. Now let’s get on the road.” Christopher, ever the cowboy type, got on his horse and began to trot ahead of the wagon. John, the young man who had but recently been on the verge of death, got up onto the bench with the doctor.
He didn’t say a word, and avoided eye contact with Harrison. The doctor flattened his mustache, and took the reins in his hands. With a quick pop, they took off behind Christopher, who rode ahead on his horse, watching the road.

The sun, colored bloody by the fallout of the great cataclysm, began to make itself fully visible from the earth, rising over the plains in the east. The journey had begun, down south they would head. The wasteland would soon cover the bodies of those wayward scavengers, their lives wasted for trinkets. Foolish. Maybe in the south there would be a place the travelers could hang their hats, and call their home.

The towers of Denver greeted them as they passed by slowly down Interstate-20, so much like the markers of a burial ground. John saw the image return to his mind. He felt the searing pain in his chest, and the happiness he had felt. Happiness? Odd… He held the little key in his hand, still attached to his necklace. He stroked it lightly with his dry forefinger, lost in thought, lost in remembrance. They bypassed the graveyard, and headed into the plains of death, and into the unknown.