Tool
Rainbow Muppet Overdrive
Northview
The Fence Line
Madison was idling away from the group when she heard Auguste's words, and she threw up a thumb's up over her shoulder. This wasn't her first rodeo. This wasn't even her tenth rodeo. This was a larger swarm than she'd ever dealt with, but Madison had waded through dead flesh for so long and in such numbers and frequency that fear no longer ruled her. On the contrary, it curdled in her gut into anger, fuel for an internal engine of hate and disgust.
Some hippy dippy music swelled from Fish's ride, and Madison couldn't help but flick on her own tunes. It was an honest-to-god cassette, and though the strip had gotten a little wobbly in places with time and heat, it still played, still worked. The thrumming base of Queen kicked up, a little more effective in getting Madison's blood pumping and in attracting the attention of hungry mouths. Not that Madison's temper needed any help.
As she rode, the woman roared her engines and headed towards the fray. If lost: go towards the cries of the innocent and the thunder of gunfire. A girl, someone young and fresh-faced and scared, lay perched atop the fence surrounding the school, waving frantically for attention and presumably screaming for help. Like a bad B-movie, Madison watched as that pale face became even more uncertain as teenage feet lost purchase and she fell, only to land on the side opposite.
Nope, nope, nope, not today.
Acting with swift, sure fingers, the cop holstered her gun, opened the throttle of her bike wide, and sped towards the ragged group of walking filth, reaching for fresh prey. Madison could feel fire in her spine spreading through her veins, and she flushed red. Brutality and hatred etched into her heart while retribution lodged in her throat and made her teeth clench. She unbuckled her pack by feel. She'd need that later, if she lived.
With all the confidence and bravery of someone with nothing to lose and everything to fight for, Madison banked hard, her knee scraping the asphalt of the high-school parking lot as the bike leaned nearly horizontal, before Madison simply ......let go. The bike slid across the blacktop without its rider or pack, sending up sparks and taking out a swath of dead-heads between Madison and her target. Honestly, it was a move she'd only ever pulled once before, and at the time it had very nearly snapped her ankle, but what the hell.
Desperate times.
The trust Madison had put in the layers upon layers of leather and sports padding and more leather and duct tape was trust well placed. It was hot as Satan's personal armpit, but still, trust well placed. Her protection held. Madison came out of the roll quicker than a hiccup before launching herself at the nearest zombie, an inarticulate howl of savagery audible even past the bolted-down plexiglass of her visor. The force landed her atop the creature, and she shoved a knife into the creature's soft palate from below, and as she yanked it free, it broke through both jawbone and teeth, giving the dead a grotesque, floppy, mandible-like appearance, though admittedly not for very long. Now that the lower jaw was out of her way, Madison re-stabbed her prey through its hard palate and hit gold.
Apocalypse or not, crazy got all the knives.
After two hard pulls, the girl's blade came free of the zombie's skull, and she got to her feet just in time to face two more, one lurching in from the front, and its mirror to her immediate left. Madison gave her arm to the zombie on her left, leaving it to eagerly scrape its teeth on her sports padding and layered leather. Dead or not, zombies only had as much force to put to use as an average PCP-addict on a rampage; formerly human mouths could only chomp through so much. While the mouth on her left was occupied, Madison pulled a gun from one of her holsters and blew away the abomination ahead, and only then did she bend her free elbow and put the barrel of her piece against a forehead that had gone soft and mottled, squeezing the trigger and sending a spray of blackish brains out the back of its skull, its bite going instantly slack and releasing her forearm.
The unrestrained brutality with which Madison fought spoke to the profound, personal insult these creatures presented. The briefest of pauses in the surge allowed Madison the luxury of handing the teen her recently fired gun, handle first.
"Get to the motorcycle bag," Madison ordered. "Ammo."
Indeed, the bag lay somewhere between the living pair and the downed bike, and it contained a dump truck of clips for the semi-autos and speed-loaders for the revolvers, even if it was distressingly close to all the zombies Madison's Harley had plowed into. The dead weren't terribly dexterous, especially after having been knocked into by speeding, stray Harley, but they were slowly groping to their feet or trying to crawl. Lord bless that motorcycle, it hadn't quit even if the engine was off, and Freddie Mercury was still loudly informing any zombie within earshot they had blood on their face. Big disgrace.
For hours prior, Madison had played putt-putt ahead of a horde, tension and simmering fury building beneath her skin, one hollow moan at a time. Hunger and the throbbing pain in the back of her head washed away in a tidal wave of adrenaline and white-hot contempt. She slid her knife back into its sheath and pulled her tactical hatchet from its place on her thigh, then hooked it on a dead-head. With an enthusiastic yank, Madison pulled the creature towards her, taking it off balance enough for her to loop a foot around its ankle and leg-sweep it to the pavement. Asphalt meant there was something nice and hard to hit against when she brought her boot down on the zombie's face with an incredibly satisfying, wet crunch. Stomp and twist. She started towards the bag, keeping herself between the teen and the walking dead as much as possible.
Suffer no evil. Overlook no suffering. Repay your debts. Keep your promises. Save who you can. Avenge who you can't.
The words beat in her mind in sync with her bright, pounding heart.
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