Chapter 155 A Light in the Darkness
My Hockey Alpha
I was jostled awake by a bump and a swaying sensation, followed by the feeling of a searing pain
shooting through my leg and the sound of a car engine. I groaned as my eyes flickered open.
âOh! Honey, sheâs awake.â
âHold on. Iâm pullinâ over. Coast clear out there?â
âHmm⦠Mhm. I donât see anything.â
As my eyes adjusted, I saw the forms of two people sitting in front of me. Judging from the long leather
seat beneath me and the two seats in front, I was in the back of a car. A truck, too, I surmised from the
hollow and tinny sound of the engine as it sputtered to a stop.
I groaned again. The man in the driverâs seat got out of the car while the woman in the passenger seat
turned around to face me. I blinked a few times, and as her face came into focus, I saw that she was an
older woman with graying brown hair and a round, soft face.
âYou sure woke up quick,â she said with a smile, reaching out and squeezing my hand. Her hand was
warm and soft in a motherly sort of way, and it eased some of my anxieties.
âWh-Whereâ¦â
The door by my feet opened. I looked up to see an older man standing there. He was wearing a flannel
shirt tucked into a pair of jeans, which emphasized his slight beer belly. He had a baseball cap on and
had a gray mustache on his upper lip.
âHowdy, young lady,â he said with a grin. âLet me see that leg. That okay?â
I felt myself stiffen, and instinctively looked up at the woman. âItâs okay, honâ,â she said softly. âDanâs
real good at this sort of thing. Arenât you, honey?â
âYup. Decades huntinâ and trappinâll do that to ya. You get real good at pickinâ out bullets so it donât
spoil the meat.â My stomach turned at the thought, but Dan only chuckled. âDonât worry. I donât eat
human.â
He reached out and peeled back the white bandage around my leg a little bit, and I let him, although it
made me wince and grit my teeth. He eyed my wound for a second before nodding to himself.
âHowâs your head feel, sweetheart?â the woman asked. âIâm Laura, by the way. Thatâs my husband,
Dan, although I guess I already told you his name, didnât I? Anyway, we found you last night in real
rough shape.â
âUm⦠Water?â I croaked. Laura smiled and nodded. Dan held out his hand for me and helped me sit
up, and once Iâd chugged an entire bottle of water in one go, he pointed at my leg with a confused
expression on his face.
âYour legâs lookinâ mighty healed already for someone who was shot less than twelve hours ago,â he
said.
My eyes widened. I couldnât tell these people about my healing abilities.
But, it seemed that they werenât looking for answers. âWell, either way,â he continued, âyouâre lucky we
found ya out there.â
âMhm,â Laura chimed in. âYou were nothinâ more than a hop ân a skip away from meeting the big old
man in the sky,â she said, pointing upwards with a grin.
I swallowed, leaning my head back on the headrest. The pain in my leg was still unbearable, and when
I searched for my wolfâs presence, it was nothing more than a flicker. She must have used up any
strength she had left to help me fight off James.
âThanks,â I said quietly, then peered out the window. It was just barely morning; the sun still hadnât
come up yet, but it was bright enough to see everything through the slight tinge of blue. âWhere are
we?â
Dan sighed, then looked around. âJust a few miles north of town,â he said. âWeâre headinâ out that way
where there ainât any of them⦠What are we callinâ em, honey?â
âProwlers,â Laura said proudly. Then, whispering: âI came up with that one myself.â
I couldnât help but smile a little bit at the older coupleâs good humor, but at the same time, I knew I
needed to get home. I couldnât leave town, not with my friends still there.
âAnyhoo,â Dan continued, âI heard thereâs a safe zone just a little ways further north. This⦠disease, or
whatever it is, spreads like wildfire. Just before the news stations went out, I saw that all of the towns in
the nearest fifty-mile radius are crawlinâ with the Prowlers. I dunno if the rest of the world even knows, if
Iâm beinâ honest. Weâve always been sorta remote out here, and well⦠You know how the folks âround
here are. They rather take things into their own hands.â
âHelp is on the way,â I replied. âI can tell you that much.â
Laura and Danâs eyebrows raised, but they said nothing. There was a bit of a silence before Laura
spoke.
âYouâre coming with us, right, honey?â she asked. âYou donât wanna go back there.â
Her eyes were pleading and full of worry, but I shook my head. âI canât. I have to go back for my
friends.â
Dan and Laura exchanged glances. âHonâ, Iâm afraid your friends are probably beyond the point of
help,â Dan said. âYou were the first uninfected human we saw in days.â
I shook my head again. âNo. Thereâs an antidote.â
âAnd what do you think a single little girl like yourself is gonna do?â Laura asked, sounding a bit
flabbergasted now. âCure everyone in town?â I swallowed; I hadnât thought that far ahead. I only cared
about my friends, and I wasnât going to take no for an answer. Dan, seeing this, finally nodded slowly
and let out another sigh.
âWell,â he said, âwe can take you back to town if you really want. Itâs your decision. But with that legâ¦â
âIâll be fine,â I said. âThank you.â
Laura opened her mouth to speak, but shut it again and turned around in her seat. Dan nodded once
more and shut the door, then came around and got back into the driverâs seat. No one spoke as he
pulled away from the side of the road, then swung the truck back around in the direction of the town.
We were close enough to town, so it didnât take long before Dan stopped the truck right on the
outskirts. I got out first, limping on my injured leg despite Lauraâs protests, and grabbed my backpack
out of the back of the truck.
âYou sure about this?â Dan asked.
I nodded solemnly. âThank you for everything,â I said, âbut I do need to go back.â
Laura sighed and put her hands on her hips. âWell⦠Good luck,â she said quietly.
âThank you.â
âHere,â Dan said, reaching into the back of the truck and retrieving a double-barreled shotgun. âCan
you shoot?â
âItâs okay, I donâtââ
âI said, can you shoot?â
I nodded. Dan shoved the gun into my hands, then gave me a box of bullets.
Silver ones. I recognized the box as the same one from the gun shop that the woman gave me before.
âYou use those if you need to,â Dan said. âPump, shoot, then run. Donât bother lookinâ to see if itâs dead
or not. And if you come across a human whoâs not all there, like the one Iâm assuminâ shot you last
night⦠Aim for the chest. The bullets have a good spray to âem, so you donât have to be too accurate.â
I nodded solemnly, my hands shaking as I gripped the gun tightly. âThank you,â I said quietly.
Dan only gave me a single, grim nod before they both walked back over to the truck and opened their
doors.
âKeep an eye on that leg,â Laura said over her shoulder. âIf the Prowlers donât kill you first, the
infectionâll kill you for sure.â
âIâll keep an eye on it.â
With that, Laura and Dan soberly got into their truck. I watched as they drove off, watching the truck
fade into the distance, before I took a deep breath and turned back toward the town.
As I limped toward my destination, I only had one goal in mind: I had to find the antidote and save my
friends