CHAPTER THIRTY FIVE

He smelled smoke.

The smoke of meat came to him on the wind of the next day, in the morning, before light.

At first light, he scanned the horizon and saw, across the bay, the columns of rising smoke. He checked the map. Sausalito.

He’d spent the day before combing the wreckage of the Army. There was nothing to be had. Everything that was left had burned long ago. When he went to the cemetery below the ridge, he found bones in the bottom of each open grave. Nothing more.

Maybe there is someone, maybe even I Corps, over there on the other side of the bay, Sergeant?

But there was no answer.

Someone was there.

Later he rode out to the north, crossing large sections of muddy bay where ancient supertankers rested on their sides. Occasionally he passed large craters.

At the northern edge of the bay, mudflats gave way to the tall brown grass of the estuaries. A long thin bridge, low to the water, stretched off toward the west.

A heron, white and tall, stood still, not watching the Boy.

The bridge may only go so far.

After a small break and time spent looking at the map, he decided to try and cross the bridge.

You would ask me why I was in such a hurry to get to the other side, Sergeant. You would say, Whatchu in a hurry about, Boy?

I would say, I want to know what’s in Sausalito.

Then you would say, You always did.

That is what you would say.

But the voice didn’t say anything.

The Boy had not heard the voice since the open graves and the tattered canvas.

The ride out into the marshes made the Boy feel lonely—lonelier than he’d ever felt in all his life. Other than the heron he’d seen at the eastern side of the thin bridge, he saw no other life.

‘That is why I feel so alone, because there is no other living thing,’ he thought. He’ll speak to me again.

In the afternoon, the wind stopped and fog rolled in across the bay. Faster than he would have ever expected, the fog surrounded him and he could see little beyond the thin road ahead.

Only Horse’s hooves on the old highway broke the silence.

He expected some bird to call out to another bird, but there was nothing. No one to call to, even if it were just another bird.

It was then he began to think the bridge might never end—that he would ride forever through the fog.

And what about food? I can’t go off in those marshes to hunt. I would be stuck. And Horse, what of him if I have to run?

Stop. You would tell me to stop, Sergeant.

The road will end. And if not, I will turn back and go the long way around the bay.

The thought of having to ride back through the eerie stillness at night did little to comfort him, and for a long time he rode on until at last the bridge began to rise back onto dry land.

See, I had nothing to be afraid of, right, Sergeant?

The Wasteland Saga
cover.html
title.html
contents.html
part001.html
chapter001.html
chapter002.html
chapter003.html
chapter004.html
chapter005.html
chapter006.html
chapter007.html
chapter008.html
chapter009.html
chapter010.html
chapter011.html
chapter012.html
chapter013.html
chapter014.html
chapter015.html
chapter016.html
chapter017.html
chapter018.html
chapter019.html
chapter020.html
chapter021.html
chapter022.html
chapter023.html
chapter024.html
chapter025.html
chapter026.html
chapter027.html
chapter028.html
chapter029.html
chapter030.html
part002.html
chapter031.html
chapter032.html
chapter033.html
chapter034.html
chapter035.html
chapter036.html
chapter037.html
chapter038.html
chapter039.html
chapter040.html
chapter041.html
chapter042.html
chapter043.html
chapter044.html
chapter045.html
chapter046.html
chapter047.html
chapter048.html
chapter049.html
chapter050.html
chapter051.html
chapter052.html
chapter053.html
chapter054.html
chapter055.html
chapter056.html
chapter057.html
chapter058.html
chapter059.html
chapter060.html
chapter061.html
chapter062.html
chapter063.html
chapter064.html
chapter065.html
chapter066.html
chapter067.html
chapter068.html
chapter069.html
chapter070.html
chapter071.html
chapter072.html
chapter073.html
chapter074.html
chapter075.html
chapter076.html
chapter077.html
chapter078.html
chapter079.html
chapter080.html
chapter081.html
chapter082.html
chapter083.html
chapter084.html
part003.html
chapter085.html
chapter086.html
chapter087.html
chapter088.html
chapter089.html
chapter090.html
chapter091.html
chapter092.html
chapter093.html
chapter094.html
chapter095.html
chapter096.html
chapter097.html
chapter098.html
chapter099.html
chapter100.html
chapter101.html
chapter102.html
chapter103.html
chapter104.html
chapter105.html
chapter106.html
chapter107.html
chapter108.html
chapter109.html
chapter110.html
chapter111.html
chapter112.html
chapter113.html
chapter114.html
chapter115.html
chapter116.html
chapter117.html
chapter118.html
chapter119.html
chapter120.html
chapter121.html
chapter122.html
chapter123.html
chapter124.html
chapter125.html
chapter126.html
chapter127.html
chapter128.html
chapter129.html
chapter130.html
chapter131.html
chapter132.html
chapter133.html
chapter134.html
chapter135.html
chapter136.html
chapter137.html
chapter138.html
chapter139.html
chapter140.html
abouttheauthor.html
alsoby.html
copyright.html
aboutpublisher.html