Flood Plains Mark Wheaton (inspirational books for students .TXT) đ
- Author: Mark Wheaton
Book online «Flood Plains Mark Wheaton (inspirational books for students .TXT) đ». Author Mark Wheaton
As they passed hundreds of people, if not over a thousand, waiting to head up the stairs, they spotted the mayor of Houston, Connie Bresnan. She was a short woman wearing a gray-and-pink suit with whiter hair than Big Time remembered seeing on television. Every line on her face was showing. She was in conference with two suit-wearing men when Officer Franklin signaled to her.
âThese men just came up the stairs. They say they drove down from Tomball.â
âHow is that possible?â Bresnan asked Big Time, not mincing words.
âWe found a way to fight it off.â
âYou fought it on the stairs just now?â
âNo, it left us alone. We think itâs a numbers-thing with this. Itâll sacrifice going after a couple of stragglers if that means consumingâŠhow many people you have up here?â
âJust over three thousand,â one of the suit-wearing men, who Big Time thought he recognized as a city councilman, replied.
âYeah, that,â Big Time nodded.
âWeâve watched people getting torn apart all day,â the mayor continued. âWhy not you?â
Scott held up six large cans of paint thinner.
âItâs oil. We burn the motherfucker with shit like this when it gets close.â
Though the proceedings were deadly serious, Big Time detected a hint of glee in Scottâs voice at getting to play the badass who swore in front of the city mayor.
âThey think we can get out,â said Gonzales.
âHow?â asked the mayor.
âWe use this as accelerant,â explained Scott. âMake fire bombs and drop âem on the four worms. As I said, itâs oil. The second it ignites, it loses its shit. Thereâll be a chain reaction through every bit of the creature, and itâll sink like a stone back into the floodwaters to douse itself. You will have a couple and only a couple of minutes to get down those stairs and out of here.â
âThat sounds risky,â said the other suit-wearing man.
âSounds that way because it is,â said Scott.
âLet me get this straight,â said the city councilman. âYour plan is to drop paint thinner onto these things and try to set them on fire like a circus act?â
âAnd your plan is to keep going up and pray these things run out of rope before you do?â Scott shot back. âThese bastards killed my whole family today. Killed everybody at my place of work except these guys. Most of this cityâs dead. How many more have to die to prove to you that thereâs nowhere you can run?â
Everyone went silent. Finally, Mayor Bresnan spoke.
âIâm truly sorry for your loss. There donât seem to be any survivors from my daughterâs school or my husbandâs office. This is obviously a disaster on a scale difficult to comprehend. Youâve seen fire work against this thing?â
âNot on this scale, but we didnât have cans full of kerosene either,â Scott replied.
Big Time held up his burned hand.
âA can of WD-40 and a lighter saved my life earlier.â
âWeâre just trying to give you and everybody else here a shot,â Scott said. âIf it doesnât work, haul ass back up here and wait it out. If it does, then spread to the four winds and make sure that nobody stays in groups more than two or three. That said, I canât tell you how long itâs going to be discombobâŠdiscomâŠshit.â
âDiscombobulated?â Mayor Bresnan asked.
âThatâs it right there. Suffer from a little of it myself.â
Mayor Bresnan chuckled. Big Time realized, in another context, heâd think his friend was flirting with her.
âWere you in the military?â she asked, eyeing him curiously.
â407th Army Field Support here in Texas.â
For some reason, Mayor Bresnan nodded as if this meant everything in the world to her.
âBetween me and my two friends here, I think we can get this job done for you,â Scott concluded.
âTwo friends? That the discombobulation talking again?â
Thatâs when they realized Muhammad was no longer with them.
âą âą âą
When Mia passed out, Sineada just about panicked. She looked at this little girl lying there with her eyeballs rolled up into her head and suddenly worried that the mental strain mightâve caused an aneurysm or something else to burst.
âWhatâs wrong with her?â Alan cried through gritted teeth, cold rain water pelting his face..
Sineada searched her mind and breathed a sigh of relief.
âPart of it is dehydration. It knocked her down, sure, but it shouldnât have had this effect on her.â
Alan was in tremendous pain. He was sweating out of every pore and thought that heâd be going into shock at any moment. He was suddenly worried that if he went unconscious, it might become increasingly difficult to revive him if Sineada was concerned with Mia.
âCanât you use your âtalentâ on me?â Alan barked. âThis is killing me!â
Sineada turned to Alan, her eyes filled with anger.
âI donât know what kind of con youâre planning to run to save your hide, but using Mia is out of bounds,â Sineada hissed. âYou want my help? Youâre going to need to behave, understood?â
Alan nodded quickly. It struck Sineada as insincere, and she sent a bolt of psychic pain through Alanâs nervous system, something she didnât even think she was capable of. When Alan winced, she felt a guilt over the sense of satisfaction she got from it.
âUnderstood?â she repeated.
âYeah. Iâll go where you go. I wonât be a problem.â
âFine.â
Alan began to feel his pain ebbing away. It was still present but muted.
âYouâre not as powerful with this as she is, huh?â Alan said.
âNo, I am not,â Sineada said, pouring water from one of the bottles across Miaâs lips.
âBut you can tell what this thingâs thinking, too?â
âYes, but only because itâs not thinking all that much. Seek out and kill, consume, repeat. Itâs broadcasting that with a vengeance, so even I can pick up on some of it. Itâs just with all the different voices within it, it can be overwhelming.â
âThen why canât
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