
5
Standish came off the back of our wagon like a scalded cat and sprinted the eighty or so metres to the lead wagon.
I entertained the flies round my head as Sam kept adjusting his hat to save what was left of the skin on the back of his neck.
Seconds later, Davy jumped back on the 175 and screamed off towards the other two wagons. Standish hurried back to us and clambered aboard.
'Listen in.' He picked up the sat-comms handset as if he was about to make a serious announcement to all of the most important people in the world. 'The Mercs are still by the house, in the dead ground about two and a half Ks ahead of us. Davy has seen rebels in flatbed pickups. He also saw a body. They'd cut it limb from limb and lined up all the parts outside the gates. He couldn't tell if it was one of ours.' He tapped numbers into the dial pad. 'We'll have a rolling start line. We're going to go straight for them – get the wagons into the compound, load up, get out. No roads, cross-country to the coast.'
A cloud of dirty smoke shot from the exhaust of Frankenstein's wagon, and the other three drivers took their cue. Sam fired the ignition. 'All aboard the Skylark.' There was something childlike about Sam. It wasn't always there but just now and again the kid in him would jump out of his head. The exhaust rattled like a tumble-dryer full of spanners.
Standish was still trying to get through. 'Hello? Hello?'
