Namazu
Baron of Bad Boys
- One on One
- Group
- Off-site



QUAPAW, OKLAHOMA
Somewhere on I-44, Two Weeks After the Clubhouse Raid
An azure-blue sky, cloudless and perfect, stretched out before them. The sun glimmered high, illuminating the land that rolled out in front of them. Flat and lush with green fields all the way to the horizon, there were some thickets and groves of trees that swayed lightly in the gentle wind. On one side of the highway was a wooded area, untouched and cozy-looking. A big blue tractor was in the middle of a field on the other side of the highway, tending to the tall stocks of corn. Knee high by July, as the saying goes.
“Damn pretty sight.” Fish commented, before putting the tourism brochure down and folding it back up. Slouched in the front seat of his GMC Sierra truck, Fish had one elbow propped up by the window. They’d kept the windows closed, due to the chill in the late winter air. Sighing, he laid the tourist brochure in his lap and picked up the map again, resting his head on his curled fist as he looked over their route again.
“Shame it looks nothing like that out there now.” He muttered. It was late in the day, with dark storm clouds gathering overhead. The temperature hovered at just the right temperature that it could come down as snow, or it could come down as cold, uncomfortable rain. If they were unlucky? Hail.
The reality was, there was no field of corn and big tractors. No green grass waving in the wind. The trees were brown from winter, shriveled and bare. The highway was occasionally littered with abandoned or wrecked vehicles and the bodies of the dead - sometimes shuffling along on their feet, sometimes nothing but tatters smeared across the road. There was nothing, and they’d been driving for days seeing the same thing everywhere they went. A whole lot of nothing and nobody in a dead world.
“The exit should be coming somewhere up there soon.” Fish muttered, gesturing lazily in front of them. The metal bracketed arm with the big green sign was far off in the distance yet, too far to read, but even with the building clouds they could see the reflective green from here. The sign looked dirty and worn - probably fading from the weather now that nobody was around to replace or clean it.
It was the first exit they could find off the highway - it was either this, or keep going for another nearly hundred-some miles on the toll road and head straight to Tulsa. Not that they hadn’t already traveled far more than that in the past two weeks or more, but it was getting late and they needed to find a place to bunk down for the night. Nobody really wanted to sleep in their vehicles, though they would if they had to.
Fish glanced aside at Nik, now their Sergeant-at-Arms, who he’d been riding with a good chunk of the way. Normally he’d insist on driving his own truck (seeing as how he’d now claimed this beauty for himself), but he was tired and in need of a break. Switching off drivers had become the rule - driving tired wasn’t good for any of them. He pushed himself as far as he could, until pushing further was a bad idea. Not that he complained, he kept that to himself. He just waited until the midday break to switch with Nik. He wasn’t really sure he trusted Nik’s sister behind the wheel, though - so she got relegated to the back seat, behind Fish.
Fish briefly glanced behind them at the back seat, and immediately wished he hadn’t. Willow was the only one back there. Where Kit should have been sitting, would have been sitting, there was just an empty seat packed with various duffle bags and backpacks of food, water, guns, and other supplies. Their personal belongings - or what was left of them - were all packed securely in the back of the truck. It didn’t feel right, leaving him back there at Roanoke with other people, even if that was what he wanted. What he needed. What they all needed. Fish couldn’t make decisions based on what he alone wanted - he had to put the club first. He knew it could be worse, but the absence felt uncomfortably heavy. He’d spent an awful lot of time swallowing down his thoughts and feelings to put on a brave poker face.
Reaching up to the CB radio mounted to the ceiling of the truck, Fish pulled down the handheld transmitter and held down the button. They were the third vehicle in the convoy, behind their two forward scouts, but as the now President of this new club, it was his job to make sure everyone stayed together and on course. The convoy was made up of a whole range of vehicles - pickup trucks, cars, motorcycles, even a minivan that he and Auguste had taken to calling The Tub. Auguste’s eighteen-wheeler travelled in the center of it all, well-protected. He did what he could to put people where they were safest and most useful, pairing prospects with more experienced members. It was a long drive, and now was the perfect time for knowledge to rub off on to the newer people - and to keep the personalities that wouldn’t mesh away from each other for now.
“Fish to convoy, exit coming up ahead, stay with the group, eyes open. Big Rig, we’re approaching our first stop here real soon. How’s the cargo?” Auguste was driving the group’s big rig, hauling a trailer full of their motorcycles. Precious cargo, second only to the people themselves. He was the most experienced truck driver they had, and one of the very few he trusted to handle that thing. Lila rode with him, since the two had been inseparable for some time now. Understandably so. Billie rode with them, sleeping in the back sleeper until it was time for Auguste to take a break.
“Cargo’s really gotta pee, Fish.” Lila’s voice came through the radio first, and he could imagine the grin on her face as she answered irreverently. No doubt Auguste was rolling his eyes at her and motioning for her to give up the radio transmitter so he could actually report back something useful.
Before Auguste could rescue his transmitter from Lila and save the rest of them from more Lila-brand commentary, the radio hissed with the sound of rushing air. Someone on a motorcycle had keyed up.
“Ay Fish, ito tae, tao? Shit up ahead and it don’t look good. It looks fucked.” Marc’s voice came through, loud and clear, as he asked if the president’s vehicle could see this shit. Marc had a habit of sliding back and forth between languages. Some people got Spanglish, but as of late the MC was getting… whatever you called English and Tagalog. Engalog?
“What are you seeing?” Fish responded back, grabbing the binoculars off the dashboard, bringing them up to his eyes and adjusting the zoom level.
“The sign over the highway, next one coming up just ahead of you. We just passed under it. It’s got…”
Fish saw it the same time Marc finished his sentence.
“Bodies, man! Pakshet.” Marc muttered with a curse. Sure enough, four bodies in an advanced state of decomposition hung by ropes around the neck, dangling from the large metal support that held the green highway sign. Two bodies on each side of the sign, they had all reanimated and were now lazily reaching for Marc and the other scout rider ahead of Fish. Through the binoculars, it was too hard to tell much else about them.
“Ah, fuck.” Fish breathed out, thumb off the transmit button for a moment before he pressed it again for the whole convoy to hear. “Bodies hanging from the sign. If that don’t scream get-the-fuck-out, I don’t know what does. But this is the only exit for a hundred-some miles. We may be a little out of options. Big Rig, what say you?”