Read The Journal: Fault Line (The Journal Book 5) Online

Authors: Deborah D. Moore

Tags: #survival, #disaster survival, #disaster, #action, #survivalist, #weather disasters, #preppers, #prepper survival, #prepper survivalist, #post apocalyptic

The Journal: Fault Line (The Journal Book 5) (2 page)

Christine nodded in agreement once she
remembered what the surrounding neighborhood looked like. Walking
six blocks was sure to take them through some questionable, maybe
even dangerous, areas.

 

***

 

The mall ended up being a small two-story
structure with only a few dozen stores, explaining why Christine
couldn’t see it from the hotel. At least the stores were top-notch
and brand names.

“Aren’t these leggings adorable?” Lois
exclaimed, picking up the snug, hot pink, sequined pants.

“And they’re the latest thing going,”
Christine said. She had to admit they really were cute and she was
all for staying in style. “I think I’ll get black, the green, and
those deep blue ones. Now I need some matching tops.” She set her
selections on the sales counter to go look at the long sweaters,
and didn’t notice Lois slide the pink ones under the pile.

After adding a couple of tops to layer over
some new camisoles, and two sweaters, Christine handed over her
dad’s credit card.

Christine was now feeling the high she always
got when she went on a mindless shopping spree at her father’s
expense. He never said a word to her, he just paid the bill.

 

***

 

“Those new boots are going to look great with
the leggings,” Lois said, sipping another beer in the food
court.

“Probably a bit of a splurge on my part,”
Christine said, thinking of the impractical knee high, high heeled
boots in the brown soft suede leather. “I really do need those
walking shoes though. We’re on our feet all day at the office, and
my poor tootsies just ache by five o’clock.” Christine now had
several packages piled on the extra chairs at their table. A little
bit of guilt crept into her at the two hundred dollars she’d spent
at the shoe store and justified it by knowing the walking shoes
were for work. Another sip of her icy drink tamped the remaining
guilt down.

“I’m getting hungry,” Lois said, “how about
you?” She looked around at the different vendors available.

“I could eat, but let’s go back and try the
hotel restaurant. That way it goes on the clinic’s tab,” Christine
said, knowing somehow Lois would get her to pay for both dinners if
they stayed there.

 

***

 

“Typical bar food,” Lois grumbled. “We should
have had the sushi at the food court.”

“I doubt that would have been very good, and
I wouldn’t have trusted it,” Christine responded. “Besides, what’s
wrong with that chicken parmesan? It looks really good.” Lois
shrugged and gulped down some of the red wine they had ordered.

“Your shrimp teriyaki looks better. Can I
have a bite?” Lois asked, spearing the last piece of chicken on her
plate and plopping it in her mouth.

“No, we will still have dinner here tomorrow
night so you can order it then,” Christine said and feeling a bit
irritated, she poured the rest of the bottle of wine into her own
glass. Lois was definitely getting on her nerves.

CHAPTER TWO

 

 

Tuesday, November 6

At eight forty-five AM, Christine pushed open
the conference room door. She could smell the tantalizing aroma of
freshly brewed coffee and the sweetness of the donuts being
offered. She dropped her purse and briefcase on one of the tables
near the front of the room and headed for the coffee pot, hoping it
would help her hangover. Lois was still upstairs, sleeping.

Sipping the hot black brew, Christine picked
up her preprinted name badge and scanned the room from behind the
steaming cup before sitting down by her stuff.
There must be at
least thirty people here
, she thought, noticing the cute guy
and the geeky one. Not a surprise that this meeting was attended by
mostly females; guys just didn’t do office work and she envied
them, she hated paperwork.

To pass the time, she read the brochure from
the front desk. Apparently the hotel was still under construction
with the fourth floor incomplete. The flyer showed a taller
building and luscious landscaping with wandering paths, waterfall
pools, and benches. In another year it would be really nice.

The class started promptly at nine o’clock
with the usual introductions around the room. At nine-fifteen, Lois
strolled in, going straight to the food table. She spiked a cup of
coffee with three sugars and two creamers, picked up three donuts,
and ignored her name badge, which was the only one left on the
registration table.

“Why didn’t you wake me?” she whispered to
Christine, sitting down beside her.

“I tried.”

 

***

 

The speaker droned on and on for two hours,
discussing everything that was already in the handout while
flipping through the Power Point that showed on the large screen at
the front of the room. Christine took a few notes before noticing
no one else was. Her first assessment was right: it was a boring
class, and everything was explained in the neatly stapled stack of
papers in front of her.

“Okay, let’s take a fifteen minute break,”
the speaker announced. “We have one more hour to go on this morning
session, and then we’ll break for a one hour lunch, which will be a
sandwich buffet downstairs in the Coral Room adjacent to the
restaurant.”

“I hope he doesn’t mind if I have a beer with
that sandwich,” Lois said. She stood, stretching her back and
exposing the roll of pink flesh that bulged over her new hot pink
pants.

 

***

 

“This buffet is actually good,” Lois
commented to Christine. “Maybe because I can make my sandwich the
way I like it.” Christine looked over her shoulder to see Lois’
plate piled with macaroni salad, chips, and an over-stuffed
sandwich roll, thinking it was no small wonder the girl was so
overweight. Christine herself watched what she ate to maintain a
trim figure.

She waited until she saw Lois head to the bar
with her plate, then ducked out to take her lunch back upstairs for
some quiet reading.

Once in the conference room, Christine laid a
couple of opened paper napkins on the table to keep her place clean
and set her plate down. After retrieving a bottle of water from the
long refreshment table, she got out her latest romance novel from
the briefcase and settled in to read. A few minutes later, others
joined her, sitting individually around the room. They obviously
needed quiet time too, and that was just fine since she was in no
mood to carry on idle conversation.

 

***

 

“What was that?” an older woman sitting in
the back asked. Alarm laced her frightened voice.

Christine had felt a mild vibration, as if a
big truck had driven by. A big truck wouldn’t have been able to
rock the four-story hotel though. Another, stronger movement shook
the building and she looked around at the others in the room.
Everyone had stopped reading or eating and were gazing about.

“Those cars are skidding all over the road!”
Jerry, the geeky guy said, looking out the window, just as the
sound of a car crash echoed through the room. Christine moved to
the windows in time to see the pavement break and ripple.

“It’s an earthquake!” she tried to yell, but
her voice came out hushed and squeaky. The building shook
violently, causing everyone standing to fall, and the overhead
projection screen crashed to the floor. The geeky guy held onto the
sill to keep his balance and was rewarded by the window shattering
in his face. A large knife of glass protruding from his neck
effectively cut off his scream. He slumped to the floor in slow
motion, his eyes wide with shock. Christine looked on in disbelief,
frozen in terror by the sight of blood gushing from the wound,
blood that was now spreading toward where she sat on the floor
under the broken windows. She scooted away from the crimson puddle
in horror.

The older woman screamed.

“Somebody help him!” another woman
yelled.

Christine crawled away, cutting her palms on
bits of glass, adding droplets of blood to the already red smeared
floor. A few feet away, she finally stood on wobbly legs. The
shaking stopped and everything went silent, except for the first
woman sobbing.

“We need to get out of this building before
it collapses,” Christine said, making her way to the door as
another tremor shook the building.

“What about Jerry?” someone asked.

“Jerry is already dead,” Christine responded.
“Let’s get out of here and find someone in charge. They’ll know
what to do about… him.” She glanced at the body and shivered.

In the hallway, she pounded on the elevator
call buttons.

“We can’t take the elevator. What if the
power goes out while we’re in there and we get stuck? They say to
use the stairs only,” said a woman whose nametag read “Cheryl.”

Christine turned to the stairs with the lit
exit sign over it. She pushed, but the door wouldn’t move. “Give me
a hand,” she said, and two of the younger women leaned on the door
and together they opened the door only a foot.

“Anyone have a mirror?” Cheryl asked. “Maybe
we can see what’s blocking the door.”

“What good will that do? We still can’t get
out!” sobbed someone else.

Christine looked around and saw another exit
sign. “I’m going to try another door. I’ll be right back.”

The door opened with ease and she signed in
relief, until she stepped into the stairwell to see all the rubble
blocking their way down. The other women crowded the door behind
her. “We aren’t getting out this way either. Maybe we should just
wait for someone to come and rescue us. I’m sure it won’t be long.
FEMA always shows up.” Christine said confidently.

“FEMA? You’ve got to be kidding,” Cheryl
said. “Haven’t you been watching the news? They are all in New York
mopping up after that hurricane. They won’t be here for days, if
not weeks, and I, for one, am not waiting that long.”

Christine went back to the conference room
and sat down, scowling at Cheryl. Cheryl was right of course,
though Christine was not about to admit that. She pulled out her
cellphone to call 911 only to find all the circuits were busy.

“I’m not staying in here with a dead body,”
someone said, muffling a sob. Christine looked over at the windows,
realizing she had forgotten all about Jerry. She stood quickly,
knocking her purse on the floor, spilling the contents. She picked
up her keycard.

“My room is upstairs. Maybe we can get
through some of the rubble going up and at least we’ll have some
comfort while we wait,” she said. “Besides, I need to change my
shoes. These boots are killing my feet!”

The five women, led by Cheryl, entered the
stairwell cautiously.

“We better prop this door open in case there
are any more aftershocks, just to make sure we can get back in if
we need to,” Cheryl suggested. They pushed the heavy door flat
against the wall and moved a couple of fallen bricks against
it.

Everyone peered over the railing at the
blocked exit.

“That whole wall caved in,” someone
whispered. “I hope we don’t have to climb over all that.”

The stairwell was lit only by the lights over
the doorways, the dim shadow barely enough to see by as they
ascended to the third floor, avoiding the debris on the steps.
Cheryl pulled open the third floor door and the same two younger
ones piled the few chunks of concrete to hold it open.

Christine stepped into empty hallway, the
soft carpeting muffling their steps. She checked the numbers on the
first two doors and turned the other way toward her room.

“Where is everyone?” Cheryl asked.

“When we checked in yesterday the desk clerk
said we should have the floor to ourselves because they were at
only ten percent capacity. I guess that’s because it’s the middle
of the week, and middle of construction,” Christine informed her.
“Here we are,” she said when they got to the end of the long, quiet
hall. She slid her key card in and pushed the door open just as the
hall lights flickered and went out. The room was bathed in the
diffused sunlight coming from around the edges of the blackout
drapes. Christine inched her way to the lone window and shoved the
drapes aside, flooding the place with brightness.

“That’s better,” the older woman said,
nervously sitting on the edge of the bed. “I don’t like it too
dark.”

Swell
, thought Christine,
my
flashlight is in the car
. She looked around the messy room and
thought again that Lois was a real slob. Christine had made her bed
as soon as she got up. Lois, on the other hand, had left the sheets
in a pile in the middle of the bed and her clothes were tossed onto
the only two chairs.

“Um, sorry about the mess. Lois got up late
and obviously didn’t pick up after herself,” she apologized, then
wondered why she was making excuses for that slob.

She picked up the in-house phone, surprised
she actually got a dial tone. Dialing the operator she waited and
waited. “No answer at the front desk.”

“So what are we going to do now?” someone
asked once they had all used the bathroom. Christine had already
changed into her new walking shoes, tossing the impractical boots
on a chair.

“Let’s find another stairway and see if we
can make it down,” Cheryl suggested. “And we better prop open this
door too, just in case.”

“Why? I still have the keycard,” Christine
protested.

Cheryl raised her eyebrows. “It won’t work
without electricity. We can get out; we just can’t get back
in.”

“Oh.”

 

They followed the long, silent hall around
two turns before they came to another exit sign, indicating stairs.
Christine pushed on the door and it gave way easily.

“It sure is dark in there,” she said
nervously. Once again, they propped the door open with a few pieces
of fallen wall board, allowing a modicum of light to shine in.

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