Author's Notes:
This story is an attempt to get my feet wet in the world of writing again. I used to do poetry in college, and studied theater as my major. As such, there will be a good bit of Dialogue. I have been inspired to do this from MH's mini-series, and Dannus' short stories. I have been struggling to flesh out a novel I've been working on for a while... and when I say "Flesh Out" I mean get passed the storyline stage. So any constructive criticism yall have for me on this will also help me with that!
Basically, Eddie Johnson is a young combat veteran who went AWOL after this disease began to spread, turning people into something... not entirely people. He made it home where he was able to gather some of his immediate family and his best friend, Justin Buckley, and consolidate them on the family property in rural Arkansas.
Buckley, on the other hand, was not so fortunate. His father was an EMT and his mother, a nurse. His father was the first person either of them knew intimately who became infected and, because they lived closer to the town center, their house was overrun one evening. Buckley was barely able to make it out with his life. His mother was on shift at the hospital that night, despite Buckey's objections. He hasn't seen her since that night. Buckley is/was a combat medic in the National Guard. He has no deployments under his belt. After losing his father, Buckley made the same decision Eddie did; family is more important than anything.
"Dad" is Eddie's father. He was Special Forces in his younger days, but in his older age his phsyical condition has been worsening. It doesn't help that he's a pack-a-day smoker.
Jimmy Johnson is Eddie's older brother. Kind of snooty, but a true outdoorsman to the core. Backpacker, avid hunter, fly fisherman. Not so much on survival craft, he is a crack shot with a shotgun and a world-class runner.
AWOL
Ch. 1 “Homefront”
Eddie Johnson awoke to the rat-tat-tat sound of fully automatic fire. It was a ways away, but he knew the family holed up down the road, had actually gone to basic with their son. At that time, Johnson envied the fact that he would be coming home after graduation... sometimes he had wished he had joined the Guard instead. He hadn't been aware the family had any sizable firepower until now, though. Not surprising, really. He would have tried to raid the armory in the final days, too.
Rolling out of bed and reaching for his AK, he made his way to the door of his room when it swings open on its own. He reflexively shoulders the weapon crouching in the shadows. In the moonlight filtering through the boards at the window he sees his dad's face, ashen and thin and grim.
“Dad! I totally almost shot you! What the hell were you thinking?” He lowers the weapon and safes it at the same time. The audible “click” causes his father to jump, almost imperceptibly.
“Sorry, son. I... uh... well, are you hearing this? I think we had better be ready with more than just myself tonight.”
“Yeah, it woke me up just a minute ago. You think that's bill and his parents down there?”
“I think so... I can't imagine anyone else getting their hands on a damned machine gun around here. Did you know they had one tucked away?”
“No, I sure didn't. No matter, though. I hate to say it, but it's true.” Eddie shrugs his shoulders.
“These things don't really care about covering fire, do they bud?” his dad says, the tactical calculations playing out inside his head.
“No, they don't seem to do they? And firing off like that-” he pauses and listens to the automatic fire continuing, unabated in the distance “-no bursts, no nothing. He's just holding down the butterfly. I doubt they even have a spare barrel. Bill was a medic, after all. 240's just weren't his thing.”
They both sit there a moment longer, listening to the desperate one-sided firefight in the night.
“Alright, let's get going. Should we wake Jimmy up?”
“Nah pops. I don't think we'll need him until they're within shotgunning range. He's not that keen with a rifle; we've talked about that. But wake Justin just in case.”
“Eddie-roo... I sure am glad to have you home, son.”
“Me too, dad. Me too.”


