“Take five rest,” said Ryan. “Me and J.B. will go do it to ’em again.”
The swampies had learned their lesson and were approaching more cautiously. But four or five of them went down under the combined fire of the Armorer’s Mini-Uzi and Ryan’s caseless G-12.
“Take five,” ordered Ryan, once they had all caught up with each other.
“I regret,” panted Doc, “that I truly can no longer even walk, let alone”
“We’ll hold up here,” Ryan interrupted. “Either those zombie bastards leave us be, or we stand and fight ’em. No other way.”
The ground had been getting wetter and wetter, until at every step their boots sank inches deep into slimy muck. The sky had cleared and now had only a scattering of light orange clouds, floating high and untroubled, intermittently visible through breaks in the green curtain that was draped overhead.
While they waited, Krysty stood a little apart from the others, her head to one side, listening hard. The long red hair rolled over her shoulders, bright in the half light.
Ryan came and stood by her, putting a hand on her wrist. She smiled at him.
“I’m sorry ’bout the cracks on muties!” he said.
“It’s fine, lover. I know how it is.”
He kissed her gently on the cheek, tasting the faintest hint of gasoline from the dirt and mud. “You hear them, love?”
“No. They backed off at the last firefight. But I can hear” She shook her head.
“What?”
“I heard a dog barking. Then it sounded like a pig snuffling. Not far ahead, but the wind’s against me for good hearing. I thought I heard a woman’s voice. Singing. Mebbe another swampie village ahead of us.”
They’d been running more or less blindly, picking anything that looked remotely like a trail, even, narrow animal tracks Now they were in a small clearing with some exceptionally tall elms around them, covered with the white Spanish moss, so that they resembled a mute assortment of frozen brides draped in stained wedding lace.
Ryan hesitated. If they turned back for the swampwag, they might encounter the muties. They couldn’t go right or left either. The deep waters of the salt swamps had been closing on them on both sides. That left only straight ahead, where Krysty Wroth had heard sounds of active life.
The sound of a gas engine came to them from behind; deep and throaty it was, exactly like the noise of the buggy’s engine.
“Swampies?” said Finn.
It didn’t seem likely that any community as brutish as the dirties who’d attacked them could drive a swampwag. But whoever it was, there was a better than even chance that they weren’t going to be friendly. Anywhere in Deathlands the odds were never better than even.
“On,” pointed Ryan.
THE SWAMP CLOSED IN even more, leaving only a path less than six feet wide that wound among the high-rooted mangroves. Several times the mud and water mingled, and they waded through slime that reached above their knees. Remembering the giant alligator, everyone was edgy, concentrating on the slick surface of the mud as they progressed.
Several of them, not just Krysty, heard the dog bark again. And, drawing closer, they also heard the sounds of a small rural ville. Ryan advanced cautiously forward, and the others followed in single file, moving from quivering tussock to mud thick as molasses, stopping at the sudden apparition that seemed to spring from the very swamp itself.
A skinny white man, in a red shirt and white cotton breeches. He had long white hair and a neat beard. He held out both arms to show that he was weaponless.
“You are fatigued, mes enfants . Welcome to the humble ville of Moudongue. Here you may rest, and here you will be safe.”
He turned on his heels and after a brief pause, Ryan Cawdor and his party followed the old man. There really wasn’t anything else to do.
Chapter Seven
“IF THEY WAS GOING TO fucking butcher us, then they’d have fucking done it by now!”
“Finn makes sense, Ryan,” said J.B. “Why bring us here?”
Ryan Cawdor shook his head. “Damned if I know. I just know that something here doesn’t set right.”