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QT:NW continues the official Spin-Off for the Quaranteam universe originally created by CorruptingPower. You do not need to have read the original series to enjoy this one, but you really do need to start with Chapters 1-4 (I really suggest you read the original though, it's great!). Fans of the original should be pleased to know CP has approved the story and the continuity.
In this chapter you can expect hard conversations, confrontations and announcements.
Returning Dramatis Personae
House Black
- Harrison 'Harri' Black - Sheriff of Black County, 'Jason Momoa-looking motherfucker' mountain man (mixed heritage), former Army MP
- Erica LaCosta - Fiancee of Harri, Leo's sister, Italian Tattoo Artist, Dark Brunette
- Ivy Gauthier - Quebecoise stripper, half-tattooed, Dirty Blonde anal queen
- Kyla Bautista - Trained dancer, Phillipino Spy, Harri's Deputy Sheriff, Raven hair
- Vanessa Peters - Construction Forewoman, Daughter of Brent Peters the head of the construction project, Brunette
- Macho - Rescued daschund puppy, named for his big balls, mascot and beloved pet of House Black
House LaCoasta
- Leo LaCosta - Harri's best friend and former roommate, Italian carpenter, Erica's brother
Natives
- Kara Swiftwater - Harrison's high school sweetheart that ended poorly, community leader of the local Native band, Raven hair
- Gertrude 'Gerty' Swiftwater - Kara's second cousin, Tribal police on the Rez, Voluptuous Native, Raven hair
- Tanaya - Kara's neighbour on the Rez
- Feather - Fervent native protest organizer and activist. Former colleague of Kara's.
Valkyrie Falls
- Josie 'Joss the Boss' Draper - Professional Wrestler, Athletically Trim Blonde
- Spencer - Professional Fitness Model, Apprentice Personal Trainer, Athletic Curvy Blonde
- Abigail 'Abi' JΓ³nsson - Harri's Personal Trainer, Co-owner of Valkyrie Falls women's athletic retreat, Icelandic Personal Trainer and Crossfit Competitor, Tall Athletically Muscular Blonde
Other
- Agent Greerson - Senior 'OGA' that negotiated Harri's land deal and dropped Kyla into Harri's life
Referenced Characters
- Danielle 'Dani' - Australian stripper, Brunette
- Mary Duncan - Attended high school with Harri, former cheerleader, Husband has disappeared while looking for work, left to join a 'commune' with her kids
- Lt Col Miriam Abarbanel - Military friend of Harri's, Air Force Lt Col, Jewish heritage, Commanding Officer for Valhalla Hills construction and the Oregon Quaranteam research project
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The drive up to the Rez was probably the worst one I had ever made. I'd done the drive a bunch of times in high school; being sixteen and having a little beater car so I could go to early morning football practices had given me the sort of freedom that made me the envy (and designated driver) for my friends at the time. I'd filled that car with football players more than a few times, but just as many times I'd driven up to the Rez to pick up Kara and her friends, driving them to bush parties, lakes to go swimming or even out to Portland a couple of times so we could go shopping without our parents.
Then that had all stopped, and it had been years until I'd driven up to the Rez again for the fire and the funerals. That had only been a few weeks ago now. Checking in after the fire I'd been a little panicked, not knowing if Kara was alive. Making the drive with Kyla and Erica for the funerals had been less anxiety-filled but kind of weird, and I'd had a lot of different emotions going on. Looking back, those funerals had likely been where the first transfers of the virus had happened and started to spread. So many people in one place, it wouldn't have taken much for one carrier to spread it to a few people, and now three weeks later it was rampant. It was kind of amazing that it hadn't happened sooner, between the protest at my place and the recovery efforts after the community centre fire.
Still, even after the funerals, this was the worst. Kara was probably infected, as were her cousin and her neighbour. The chances that they weren't, when it was running hot through the whole community, were negligible.
At best, according to Miriam, they had two weeks before they would show harsh symptoms, and then something like two days before they were dead. And that was the
best case
.
I passed by all the landmarks I remembered and then pulled up towards the old ticket booth that marked the boundary of the Rez. Just a few weeks ago it had been converted into the hub of their little palisade of junk, manned by big Native men on the lookout for trouble. Now, as I pulled up, the 'In' side of the road was blocked and someone had spray painted 'SICK INSIDE' and 'STAY OUT' on the old car they'd parked there. The 'Out' side had probably been blocked as well, but that car looked like someone had rammed it with another vehicle. It was at an angle and had a bunch of damage to the rear end.
Someone had done the right thing and tried to keep the outbreak quarantined. Someone else had probably thought they were doing the right thing for themselves or their family and tried to escape the death that was already haunting them. Wherever they ended up, I could only hope that they weren't spreading it to loved ones.
Not that they would be there to know. Two weeks was a long time compared to two days.
I slowly eased my truck around the shifted barricade car and rolled to a stop.
'I'm just coming in,'
I sent Kara.
'Don't come up front. People down the street. Use the back dirt drive from Leaning Oak.'
I sent a
'kk'
and started driving. The roads on the Rez weren't in GPS maps, so she'd needed to give me directions. I could remember some of the streets by sight - not a whole lot had changed on the Rez in 15 years or so - but I didn't know them all, or their names.
Part of me wanted to just speed through as fast as possible, but that would have drawn more attention than taking a slow crawl. Once I got off the main road that ran around the outskirts of the primary residential area and eventually led to the old celebration grounds, I also found that things were more... apocalyptic. More than a few cars were abandoned, half out of driveways or in the middle of the street or parked up on people's lawns in a panic. I saw one that was smashed right into the corner of a doublewide, the trailer collapsing down onto the roof. Trash and other garbage was piled in places, and I saw more than a few residences, both trailer and small houses, that had clearly been broken into. Doors smashed open, windows busted.
The worst were the bodies.
They weren't everywhere, but every once in a while someone had collapsed in a front yard, or in the driver's seat of their car. Probably looking for help. The blood, trailing from the orifices of their faces, told the story. I'd seen warzones, and bodies, before. This was something else. Portland after the protests and riots had reminded me of a warzone. What I was witnessing now reminded me of scenes from a zombie movie.
There were people as well, living. I spotted a few seemingly going about their lives. One guy was mowing his rocky front lawn with a little push mower that was sputtering. A woman was packing her car, keeping tight hold of two little kids as she did it.
A man was digging in his side yard, a cloth-wrapped body lying next to the hole.
They weren't the only people though. Down a couple of roads I saw larger gatherings. Groups, not big enough to be called a crowd, gathered. I avoided them where I needed to, finding detours.
Once I got to Leaning Oak Lane, on which I didn't see a single leaning oak tree, I wound around a couple of bends before finding the dirt track Kara had told me about. The roads of the Rez weren't laid out in a discernable pattern; not that most of the roads and streets around Jewell were much better. Between the hills and rocky terrain, whether it was the highways or the little subdivision stretches like where Mary had lived, builders were forced to adapt to the terrain. Up here on the Rez, where the land was particularly rocky - because of course the Feds way back then chose shitty terrain for it - it made for a maze that only the locals really knew by heart.
The dirt trail, because that was all it was, was rough but my truck was able to handle that easily. If the lots and roads were a little wild, the one thing going for them was that they were larger than what someone could find in the little subdivisions scattered around town. They weren't exactly
developed
lots, most of them occupied by scrub and overgrowth with just a doublewide and whatever sheds or old coverings the owners had erected through the years. The few houses were single-story, or maybe a story and an attic, and there was no way they had basements. I had to pull out my phone and text Kara again that I was on the trail because I had no way of knowing which one of the residences was hers.
I spotted her waiting nervously on the back deck of one of the small houses. She was wearing a blue jean jacket and was looking around with obvious anxiety. Her dark hair was looking a little windblown, but I'd always liked that look on her. Usually, it came along with her beautiful smile, and I'd always loved driving her around with the windows down - she would glare at me, knowing exactly what I was doing, but then break out that smile.
There weren't any smiles now.