After a few close calls with populated areas, Erika managed to find the Temple. Ty had mentioned waking up in it on the first day, and it largely matched his description. She’d marked it on her map as a potential shelter. It was isolated and on high ground, which was the perfect spot for her as far as she was concerned. It was unfortunate that it had to remain a danger zone today, but the brief journey there would be a good chance to get a good look at the place.
Provided she could avoid getting into a protracted gunfight. Michael Froese had shot Camila to death, but they’d left out just as much detail with her death as they did Blake’s. That could’ve meant anything. As far as she knew, Michael didn’t have any formal training. She’d never seen him at the range or heard that he’d had any interest in guns. He was the kind of guy who if he had said anything about it, people would know. Nerdy guys didn’t have a good track record when it came to expressing a vocal interest in firearms in American high schools, as unfair a judgement as that was.
It doesn’t matter if he knows what he’s doing. Most people who shoot people don’t exactly know what they’re doing. Sometimes they don’t even know why. All he has to do is get me first.
At some point as she closed the distance to the Temple, she became uncomfortably aware of how much more isolated she’d be at this particular moment than any other. It was a so-called “danger zone”, and yet she hadn’t heard anything resembling an explosion so far. Either that meant everyone had gotten out in time, or she’d be stepping over bodies other than Michael’s to claim her prize.
The door to the temple was half-open - whoever had left last hadn’t bothered to shut it completely.
Or he got here first.
Erika drew her rifle, half-opening the breech to check that a round was loaded. Mentally preparing herself for what it would feel like to pull the trigger on someone when she could see their face. Much as she knew she’d have to aim for the center of mass, she hoped she would have a chance to aim for the head.
It would be easier if he didn’t have a face left to stare back up at her.
The barrel of the gun entered the temple first, as Erika used it to push open the doors. It smelled horrific inside, sweet and rotten. The source was quite clear, though Erika ignored it at first as she swept the open room, checking any corners Michael might’ve been able to hide in. As she spotted a half-collapsed roof beam, her mind drifted to Ty’s pained explanation of his first moments on the island.
She wished Claudeson had let him hang. His choice to save Ty wasn’t a kind one, and the announcements made it clear that his self-righteousness and personal fortitude were a thin veneer the island had quickly managed to strip away.
There was no one here. She’d made it. Now, she could look.
If he even was a he, he was unrecognizable.
Was.
It was small, one of the smaller students at the school. There was nothing left of the head besides a bloody mass on the floor, which was currently host to a small army of ants, working diligently to strip flesh and brain matter away from the fragments of its skull. Its abdomen was distended, no doubt a result of having two days to decompose in here. A ragged chunk had been torn from one of his legs, likely by a scavenger.
She reached up and tore down one of the moldy sheets of fabric from the ceiling and cast it down over the body. It’d do nothing for the smell, but at least she didn’t have to look at it.
In front of the torn painting, a large rectangular metal roadie case lay on a small wooden crate. It seemed to gleam against its decaying surroundings. Erika stepped around, making sure that she’d be facing the door. Just in case he showed up too soon. Slinging the Martini-Henry across her shoulder, she knelt down.
As she opened the case, her eyes went wide.
"Holy fuck."
She recognized the weapon immediately. More than that, she recognized what it meant for her to have it.
What it meant that they had given it as a reward - it was exactly the kind of thing she’d fight Michael for.
Her hands traced the stamped writing on the receiver.
Kal. 7.62x51
HK Oberndorf am Neckar
Hergestellt in BRD
It was something of a legend. A Cold War relic sought after by many, but something few recreational shooters ever got their hands on. Essentially, it was a heavily modified Heckler & Koch G3 Rifle that was meant for tactical precision shooting. It was issued in response to the German police’s demonstrably inadequate sharpshooting capabilities after the Munich Massacre, and quickly built up a reputation as being an amazingly accurate semi-automatic sniper rifle, far surpassing its contemporaries.
She’d shot a G3 before, but had only ever seen pictures of these. They cost fifteen thousand dollars a piece, weighed almost sixteen pounds, had an illuminated crosshair for low-light conditions, and could shoot half-inch groups at a hundred yards with minimal effort.
It was hers, because they knew who she was, and what she could do with it.
That made her feel almost as sick as the rancid smell of decay that permeated the ruined temple.
The sound of the front door creaking open again broke her from her stupor, and she quickly shrugged the Martini-Henry off her shoulder and aimed it in the direction of the noise. There, standing on the doorway, was Michael Froese aiming a pistol at his own head.
Dumbfounded, Erika lowered the rifle slightly, and called out to him.
"Michael?"