Ashen Winter (Ashfall)

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Book: Read Ashen Winter (Ashfall) for Free Online
Authors: Mike Mullin
Tags: english eBooks
they’re not mine.”
    The guy spat again in the snow. “You’re no use to me, then. So either go back where you came from or skirt around Stockton out of rifle range. You come within shooting range, we prolly won’t waste a bullet on you, but you never know.” He turned and strode back toward the gate.
    I ground my foot into the snowy road. I knew they’d give me anything I wanted for a packet of kale seeds if I could prove they were good. I stomped back down the road to Darla.
    “No luck?” she asked.
    “Nope. They don’t believe the kale seeds are real. I can’t think of any way to prove it to them other than germinating a few, and by the time we do that, our bandit will be dead.”
    “Well, we can take him to Doc McCarthy in Warren. It looks like about twelve miles on the map. Take us an hour and a half, maybe two.”
    “Let’s do that.” I mounted Bikezilla’s rear seat. “By the way, you know what a flenser gang is?”
    “I’ve heard rumors. You don’t want to know.”
    “If I didn’t want to know, I wouldn’t have asked.”
    “Okay. A flensing knife is used to strip skin or fat from an animal, originally a whale.”
    “So a flenser gang . . .?”
    “Well, if the rumors are true, it’s a gang that’s surviving by roaming around and butchering animals to eat.”
    “But almost all the wild animals around here died from the ash after the volcano—they got silicosis.”
    “Flensers butcher the animals that ventured outside but survived—the ones that were smart enough to cover their mouths and avoid breathing the ash.”
    I was silent for a moment, listening to the harsh noise made by the cold air rasping in and out of my lungs. “So we might have a cannibal strapped to the back of the bike?”
    “Yeah.”
    “Great,” I said in a voice as grim as my mood. “Let’s go.”

Chapter 8
    An hour and a half later we were back in Warren. It was aggravating that more than halfway through the first day of our journey we were barely more than five miles from where we’d started.
    Warren, unlike Stockton, had no wall. They hadn’t had much problem with bandits so far, probably because Warren is a pimple on nowhere’s butt, while Stockton sits astride Highway 20, which connects Dubuque and Galena with Chicago.
    When we stopped at the clinic, Darla worked on untying our cannibal from the load bed while I squatted by his head, checking to see if he was still alive. When Darla rolled him over, he started thrashing and mumbling crazy stuff, which I figured counted as a sign of life.
    We carried him inside. The waiting room was cold and dark, but light streamed from one of the exam rooms down the hall. When we’d first arrived in Warren last year, the doctor’s office had always been packed with people suffering from scurvy. Now, with the steady supply of kale from our farm, we’d often find the place deserted.
    Dr. McCarthy and his assistant, Belinda, were in one of the exam rooms working on patient files by the light of an oil lamp. Darla and I carried in our cannibal and heaved him on top of the examination table.
    “Who’s this?” Dr. McCarthy said. “I don’t recognize him.”
    “One of the guys who attacked our farm yesterday.”
    The doctor picked up one of the bandit’s hands and looked at it for a moment, then held his fingers to the guy’s lips. “Lost a lot of blood. He needs a transfusion. We’ve got a donor system set up, but nobody’s going to want to donate to a bandit.”
    “We need some information from him,” I said.
    “I’ll do what I can, Hippocratic Oath and all, but—”
    “I can pay. Two hundred kale seeds.”
    Darla shot me a glance so heated I felt my face scorch. “Couldn’t you just wake him up? Give him some adrenaline or uppers or something?” she asked Dr. McCarthy.
    “If I had any epinephrine or amphetamines, which I don’t, they wouldn’t work. He’s unconscious from blood loss. The only way to wake him up is to give him a transfusion and

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