Inferno (Page 1)

CHAPTER 1

“This is the center of town?” Melissa inquired softly, surprise and disbelief evident in her voice.

Devon stared out at the small buildings as they drove slowly past. There was a tiny post office with two mailboxes out front, a barber shop, tailor, feed store, dry cleaner, a bank, and a rather large general store he suspected passed as their grocery store too. He turned down a side road, passing by a Catholic church, a synagogue, and a Lutheran church. The road came to an end, splitting back toward the woods and back roads, or back toward the center of town.

Though a few cars lined the roadsides, they were all in parking spaces. They had not been abandoned but placed there by their owners. Even the homes they drove by still had cars waiting expectantly in their driveway, just hoping that their owners would come out and take them for one final spin. Devon knew that was not going to happen.

“Go back,” Chris said softly.

Devon turned back toward town, trying to get a sense of the place, trying to figure out if there were still people living amongst the small array of buildings. “Do you sense anything?” he asked softly.

Chris’s hand tightened on the back of Devon’s seat as he leaned forward. “No,” he whispered. “Nothing. But a lot of people may not live close to town. Just because there appears to be no one left in these homes doesn’t mean there still aren’t people somewhere else.”

“Go further down that way,” Luther instructed, pointing ahead of Devon.

He kept to the left, heading down a small road that was lined with woods, but dotted with antique stores, a couple of bookstores, another dark gas station, and one log cabin that sold honey. “There’s a school about a mile down, but I don’t think that will do us any good,” Luther said softly, watching the GPS. “We’re going to need to find a place to stay soon.”

Devon made another left, heading back toward the main strip. “We can return to the hotel, I don’t think they would go back there after exhausting their prey, but I don’t know for sure. Daylight will offer us no protection either, some Halflings can go out during the day, they are still part human after all.”

Melissa shuddered, shaking her head forcefully as she wrapped her arms around herself. “Absolutely not, I am not going back to that hotel. That room was awful, just awful.”

“Maybe we can find a house to hole up in,” Liam said softly.

“You mean one of the homes where the people have either disappeared, or are splattered all over the walls?” Melissa demanded. Terror constricted her voice as it took on a note of raw panic.

“We have to stay somewhere,” Liam responded reasonably. “And we all have to eat eventually.”

Melissa turned away, her dark eyes scanning the night as she bit hard on her bottom lip. It was more than apparent that she didn’t want to stay in this town, but there was no way that Devon was leaving it. Though he had no proof that Cassie was here, it was the closest they had come to finding anything since she had disappeared. He knew that none of them wanted to be in this godforsaken town, but they would not leave it until he knew what was going on.

Devon drove back through the main street, trying hard to get a sense of what was going on, but still finding nothing. “Did Halflings kill all of these people?” Chris asked softly.

Devon shook his head as he gripped the wheel tighter. “No, they couldn’t have. There would have to be at least a hundred of them to kill all of these people before their neighbors noticed. I don’t know what is going on here, but no one would be crazy enough to allow that many Halflings to roam the earth,” Devon said softly. Though he said the words, he wasn’t completely convinced of them as they made their way slowly down the deserted road. This place was far too strange and quiet to rule out any possibility, even one he didn’t want to think about.

“Do you think something else happened to them?” Melissa inquired worriedly.

“There’s no way to know that right now,” Annabelle answered.

They all grew silent for a moment. “Well if I start trying to eat your brains, you have my permission to cut my head off,” Chris said softly.

“Excuse me?” Liam asked in surprise.

“You know the zombie movies where no one ever knows how, but all the people start to go crazy and try to eat everyone else’s brains,” Chris explained patiently.

Liam stared back at him for a moment, his nearly silver eyes questioning and thoughtful. He finally shook his head, his shaggy brown hair falling in disarray around his handsome face. “That is why I don’t watch TV.”

“Seriously?” Chris snorted in disbelief, looking as if he believed the zombie story more than Liam’s statement.

“Really,” Liam stated. “I prefer to read. Remember, I was born in a time before electronics.”

“Yeah, but things have greatly improved since then. You need to join the age of technology. I mean, you drive this big Caddy with a GPS and every new technological device in it, but you don’t watch TV?”

Liam shrugged again; Chris glanced toward Annabelle who lifted her dainty shoulders in response. Her normally lively sea green eyes were dull and flat, exhaustion and stress had taken their toll on her. “I like the Caddy and technology,” she told Chris. “Liam still prefers horseback.”

Chris chuckled softly as he slapped Liam on the back. “Oh man, I have so many great things to show you! Once this mess is over I’m gonna introduce you to the wonderful world of the twenty first century!”

“Yes, and until then, can we leave the TV talk till later,” Devon growled.

Everyone within the vehicle grew quiet as he drove down another road, discovering the small firehouse and police station. A half a mile away from them was an ice cream stand, boarded up for the winter, and a tiny movie theatre that had no showings listed. Though they passed a few more houses, Devon still could not pick up any hint of human life.

“Go back to town Devon. The General Store will probably be the best place for us to hole up for a bit. It should have supplies, and maybe even some weapons,” Luther said softly.

Melissa shook her head forcefully, her dark hair spilled around her as she hugged her knees tight to her chest. Chris rested a hand lightly on her arm, seeking to comfort her. Though she had not seen the inside of the manager’s office with his broken, bloodied body, the vision she had received of it had shaken her greatly. “Can’t we just stay in the car?” she whispered.