Dead & Gone

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Book: Dead & Gone Read Online Free PDF
Author: Jonathan Maberry
Tags: Fantasy, Horror, Young Adult
she said aloud, but her voice didn’t seem to carry very far, so she used her finger to write a thank-you in the grime on the Explorer’s broad windshield.
    Then she addressed the road that lay before her. She knew that she had a piece of work ahead of her. Today already held the promise of being hotter than yesterday. Hot enough to make rock soup, as her father used to say. The town was at least six miles ahead.
    Now, though, she was sure she could make it.
    She dug a scarf out of her backpack and tied it over her tattooed scalp.
    Don’t want to boil what brains you got left, girl, she told herself.
    Then she stepped out of the shade of the SUV and onto the road.
    For the first four miles there was nothing but road and a few smashed cars on the shoulder, but none that held any surprises. She found a lot of bones along the way—mostly animal bones—but there were human skulls and rib cages mixed in. No way to tell how they died, but out here there was no shortage of things that would pick a juicy bone clean in no time. When she squinted and looked up into the sky, she saw a single vulture drifting on the thermals, maybe two thousand feet up. Was it the same starved buzzard who’d watched her from the wing of the plane?
    “Not today, you ugly varmint,” she said.
    The buzzard, pretending indifference to her, continued to circle above the road she walked.
    Then the girl saw the tank.
    It sat askew in the middle of a steel bridge that spanned a dry riverbed. The tank was massive, with a hull that was easily twenty-five feet long and a dozen feet wide, and it had been slewed around to completely block the two-lane bridge. The long cannon barrel pointed away from her, as did a heavy-caliber machine gun. The tank and the ground around it were littered with hundreds of empty shell casings that were pitted and rusted.
    The tank was monstrous and looked like it was powerful enough to win any battle. And yet here it stood, empty, its sides stained with old smears that were probably once bright red.
    She either had to climb over the tank or go down intothe riverbed. The sides of the riverbank were very steep, though, and it would take a lot of sweaty effort under the pitiless sun to make that detour.
    She walked sideways down the edge of the riverbank to see around the tank.
    On the other side was a long line of wrecked cars and trucks, stretching off into the heat haze. Beyond them, she could see the purple silhouettes of buildings.
    The town she’d seen on the map.
    Nothing moved, though. No gray people. No reapers.
    Nothing that she could see.
    This was different from the jet; it wasn’t an enclosed, darkened death trap of a metal shell. If she got into trouble she had a fallback plan. She could run.
    So, she climbed.
    There were all sorts of metal fittings that were useful as handholds. It was hot, though. The first touch burned her fingers, and she whipped them away.
    Well, I guess you ain’t the sharpest knife in the drawer, are you, girl?
    There were pieces of cloth in her pack, and she dug them out and wrapped each of her hands. Burned hands were blunt survival tools, and she couldn’t allow that.
    With her makeshift mittens in place, she grabbed a handhold on the tank and began to clamber upward. The tank was easy to scale, and once she was atop the big turret she paused. The machine gun was belt-fed, and there were still a dozen unfired rounds. The weapon was smeared with the dusty brown residue of old blood, and when she turned to examine the curved metal hatch that led down into the tank, there was a clear handprint. The gunner must have been badly hurt, perhaps bitten, when he’d deserted hisgun and tried to escape.
    She heard a faint moan.
    That ain’t the wind, she thought.
    The girl pulled her knife and froze, then tilted her head to try and locate the sound.
    At first she thought it was behind her, but the road she’d walked was completely empty. Then she heard a faint rasping sound.
    No, not
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