OUTBREAK: ZERO is a semi post-apocalyptic pandemic roleplay set in the fictional city of Lethford, USA. Current season: Winter, 20/21.
March 2020. The world is in pandemonium as one month ago, GHNv-20 was confirmed, five months after the beginning of norovirus season. The number of the infected are in the higher hundred thousands, and the death toll is at an estimated 250,000, with about seventy percent of the rest of the population experiencing mild to moderate illnesses connected to the S. pyogenes bacteria.
The fear of the unknown has caused mass hysteria and panic.
In an attempt to provide a semblance of safety and control, military personnel patrol the streets, even here in Lethford City, and the police force is trying to keep up with the rising street violence, assault, and theft.
Welcome to OUTBREAK: zero. Will you survive?
HAYANA
SITE OWNER + HEAD ADMINISTRATOR
Hi! I'm Haya. I'm pretty much your girl for everything! If you have any questions regarding our plot, membergroups, etc. don't hesitate to ask me. I'm also in charge of coding, graphics, anything skin related, and advertising/affiliates.
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CODING
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ADDI
ADMINISTRATOR
Hey! I'm Addi. Hit me up if you need help with anything. I'm always for plotting so don't be shy. I like coffee, booze, and working out. I'm back from a long hiatus the dead so if you need anything, best ask the others until I get back into the groove of things!
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FINNLEY
GLOBAL MODERATOR
Hi hello! My name is Finnley, or Finn, call whichever and I'll be there for you (yes like the FRIENDS theme song). I am in charge of the claims and helping with miscellaneous things. Let me know if you have any questions!
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OPEN MODERATOR POSITION
outbreak
/ˈaʊtbreɪk/ zero /ˈzɪərəʊ/
a sudden occurrence of something unwelcome, such as war or disease. number, no quantity or number; nought; the figure 0.
Lexi closed her laptop and gave herself a long inhale and exhale. Being a kindergarten teacher had always had its challenges. They mostly dealt with parents, paperwork, and occasionally students. More often than not though, in the case of the students, it was usually due to the parents. Still, she rarely found herself having days where it seemed like it was too much. She couldn't remember the last time that she had left her job and wondered if she should be doing something else. It always came so natural to her. Then they had moved to online learning and she found herself beginning to struggle. Beginning to feel the weight and pressure of the job slowly wearing her down.
It was hard teaching and ensuring each child felt seen and heard while staring at a twenty little boxes with twenty little faces at the same time. It was hard getting control and focus when shouting and scary noises could be heard from the echoes of a few kid's microphones.
Then there were the parents. Some issues were good, sometimes parents bombarded her for ways to help their child adjust. Some wanted in-depth analysis of their kid's education and she happily obliged. Then, some refused to answers her calls. Or emails. Or text messages. Then there were the parents who had been dealt the harder blows. The parents who were struggling to put food on the table, much less figure out how they could get internet access and a laptop so their child could learn with their peers.
Thankfully, her public school had received a grant that allowed the school to provide internet services and equipment to select students who fell into a certain group. The issue was that it required a lot of paperwork. "Just have them scan and email the forms back." She was told. Which was asinine when you realize that the whole reason they have to sign the forms is because they had no internet, nor email and definitely no scanner. "Just mail it" she was then told. Which seemed great in theory until you again realize that the postal system was weighed down to extremes and every precious day those forms took would be yet another day a student was farther and farther behind.
So she took matters into her own hands. She got her student's address and took the forms over herself. She had met them outside their small apartment door and slid the papers through a small opening, highlighting which lines needed signatures. A twenty minute bus ride, five minute walk and another twenty minutes while collecting the forms back after they were signed and she was on her way back home.
She tucked the forms into her purse, hands in her pocket as she made her way back to the bus stop. She pulled out her phone, which of course had her bus pass on it and stood in line. Unfortunately, as she did that, she realized that her phone had died. A quick scramble through her pockets and purse as she realized she hadn't grabbed her wallet off the counter. She hadn't thought she would need it of course.
Lexi sighed in annoyance at herself before adjusting her purse, putting her hands in her pockets, and beginning the trek back to her place. One missed turn. Then maybe another. Quite possibly one more and she realized she was in a part of the city that looked like a ghost town. Well, this isn't a good sign, she thought dryly to herself. Nevertheless she continued walking in the, hopefully correct, direction back to her place. Only one way out at this point.
Benjamin made his way through the streets. The quiet atmosphere and the way he was completely alone almost made for the open credits of a horror movie. He didn't feel unsafe though, as his fingers were brushed against the gun he was holding with both of his hands. A feeling he was so used to by now that it gave him reassurance and a sense of control. But perhaps that was a false sense of security, given the fact that no bullet could stop the virus from spreading to him.
He was given the responsibility today to patrol the streets by himself, making sure people don't come to this part of town. Not exactly the type of mission he signed up for, but he did what he had to do. He was happy that he was finally a P.F.C, he'd been looking forward to the day where they finally trusted him to do things on his own. He had all the confidence in himself.
During training, he'd gotten used to things being very quiet and boring, so this was no different. Except now he wasn't exhausted from all the training they'd put him through before. He didn't think anything was really going to happen, until he noticed he wasn't alone anymore.
A blonde woman - quite pretty if he had to say for himself - was walking down the streets. He raised a brow, wondering what she could possibly be out here for. He knew she wasn't meant to be here for sure. He made his way up to her.
Lexi wrapped her jacket more securely around herself. The cool and crisp fall air was turning more and more chillingly cold each day. She didn't want to think about how much worse this all might get when winter was fully upon them. She instead forced her mind to think about the good things that were coming. Winter break was almost here, which she was actually looking forward to. She loved her job, but breaks were very much a necessity. Hot chocolate and maybe even snow, if they were lucky. There were always good things, you sometimes just had to look a little harder for them.
Lexi glanced around as she passed the empty streets. A fearful voice in the back of her head wondered if she was in the quarantined zone. She had passed a broken barricade a few blocks back but, at the time, she had thought they were from leftover construction. Now she wasn't so sure. She began debating on what the safest course of action would be at this point when a voice spoke, breaking the silence.
Lexi turned, her eyes falling upon a soldier…holding a gun and her heart all but stopped from the instant fear. She had never been around guns in her entire life and even with the military's strong presence, it wasn't like she was used to seeing them. The closest she had come to guns was on television. She swallowed hard, reminding herself to breathe and relax before nervously trying to smile. "Hi. I'm sorry. I think I'm lost."
Lexi stayed very still, hands still tucked into the pockets of her jacket. The guy hadn't sounded threatening but his presence was a clear sign that she indeed wasn't where she was supposed to be. She eyed the gun a moment, wishing she could rewind the day and charge her phone before leaving.
"I'm so sorry. This wasn't on purpose. I'm just trying to get back home and my phone died and…" Without thinking, she pulled her purse to the front, grabbing the phone out, intending to show that it was indeed dead. As she got it out though, her mind registered that she was moving very quickly towards her purse in front of someone with a gun and her nerves caused her to drop the phone, which immediately hit the ground with a crack. Lexi put her shaking hands in the air, "Sorry! Sorry!"
Benjamin knew very well not to trust everything he saw at first glance, but the woman seemed genuinely shocked by his sudden appearance. She nervously told him that she was lost.
"You sure are, this place is off limits for civilians," he said, sternly, but tried to keep a friendly undertone in his voice. She started to explain about her phone dying, and as soon as her hands moved to the purse, Benjamin's grip on the gun tightened almost out of instinct and he aimed the barrel a little more towards her. Sudden movements were definitely not a good thing, but the woman managed to pull out an actual phone before realizing what she did, and with a crack the device landed on the ground.
Benjamin lowered the gun and relaxed again when the woman threw her hands up. He didn't think he had anything to worry about. The chances that she was putting on an act and about to pull a knife out on him or something were very low in his judgment, and even if so, you don't bring a knife to a gunfight.
"It's alright, miss, calm down," he said reassuringly. "You can pick up your phone and I'll escort you out of here. Where is it that you need to go?" Hopefully for the woman, the phone was still in tact, but he doubted it.
The soldier confirmed that she had crossed into the restricted zone and Lexi mentally chided herself. This wasn't good. If he charged her with, well whatever the charge would be to being where she wasn't supposed to, she could potentially be in a lot of trouble. Her school was having a hard time trying to ensure they had enough teachers, but that didn't mean that she would be spared removal if criminal charges were placed against her. There wasn't a parent on this earth who wanted their kindergartener taught by a teacher with a police record. No matter what the circumstance might be.
Then she had made matters potentially worse by moving so fast. She caught him tense as she raised her hands, her phone on the ground. Thankfully though, he lowered the weapon, his voice urging her to calm down. Lexi nodded, breathing in a good, deep calming breath. He then told her to pick up her phone, offering to escort her out and she lowered her hands. A relieved smile played on her lips, "Really? You don't have to…I don't know…take me in for questioning or something?" She bent down, picking up the phone off the ground and turning it over. The front was completely shattered and she frowned only a moment before putting it back in her purse. He asked where she was headed and she stood back up.
"Near Riverside Park." Which she hoped she was in, at the very least, the general direction of heading. "If you want to just point me in the right direction I can find my way back."Hopefully. "I know you guys are busy with...well...everything." She tucked a strand of blonde hair behind her ear before meeting his eyes, a soft smile on her lips.
A hint of sympathy appeared in his eyes when he saw the shattered glass of the iPhone. That couldn't be a cheap phone, never mind it being cheap to have the screen repaired. He felt a little guilty, but knew he had been just doing his job, and there wasn't much he could do about it now. He wondered if he really did look that intimidating to civilians at this point.
She told him that she was headed towards nearby Riverside Park. Either she was lying or really lost, because she was headed in the complete opposite direction of that. He guessed she wasn't from here, but made a point to ask her later. Benjamin knew the city very well, but he'd grown up and lived here his whole life. He couldn't imagine anyone getting lost here because of how second-nature it had become to him.
He smiled back at the woman when she suggested he would only point her in the right direction, but shook his head afterwards. "Sorry, but I have to make sure you leave the restricted zone," he said. "And I'll be questioning you on the way."
He started to walk in the right direction to the place's exit, gesturing her to follow. He hoped she could find her way from there without a phone or a map, because he himself wasn't supposed to leave his post. "Let's get going."
Lexi nodded as the soldier brought up that it was his job to keep people out of the restricted zone. "Right. Yeah, of course." She felt a small wave of guilt wash over her at the idea that she was keeping him from doing something much more important than this. She didn't know why they had to keep people out of this area in the first place, but whatever reasoning they had was surely much more important than glorified crosswalk duty.
He smiled, easing the anxiety in her chest just a bit, although he followed it up with mentioning that he'd be questioning her on the way. "Go ahead. Whatever you need to know officer…..? Soldier….? Sorry, what's the protocol here?" She chuckled lightly, her eyes scanning over the uniform and landing over the name on his chest. "Faulkner?"
He began walking and she followed. "Well, I'm Lexi…Lexi Miller." She figured that was first on his list so she might as well get it all out. It wasn't like she had anything to hide either. Her life was as boring as it came. Much less interesting than she figured someone like his was. Not that she wasn't blissfully happy with it. "I'm a kindergarten teacher. I had to visit one of my students and my phone died so I couldn't use my bus pass and, as you can probably guess, I'm terrible at directions so…here we are." She glanced over at him, slightly curious. Though she was in no position to ask any questions. It wasn't like this was a casual meet and greet.
NOTES ; If you're game...I was thinking of throwing some *spice* in lol maybe they hear gunshots nearby and have to take cover or a group of rebels throws a smoke grenade or something or a car drives over the bridge at them?
He chuckled when she didn't know how to address him, and he was about to share his name when she found it out for herself. Right, he almost forgot he was wearing his name on him at all times. "Faulkner will do," he said. Before he could start with his first question, she introduced herself as Lexi Miller and started to explain why she was here. "I see. What's the school you teach at called?" he asked. Maybe he would recognize the name. More questions were raised in his mind, such as why she would have to visit a student in times like this, but before he could ask, a new sound rang through the air.
Gunshots.
Almost immediately the adrenaline rushed through his veins. He was on full alert. Looking for the nearest place to take cover, he pulled Lexi along with him, down to the ground behind a parked car. "Stay down," he said, almost hugging the concrete of the pavement himself. "I don't think they've seen us," he added, but the uncertainty lingered in his voice. He waited a few seconds until the shots stopped temporarily, and then sat up and cocked his gun. He peeked out at the side of the car, aiming his gun around, searching for what had been the source of the noise.
Lexi nodded to the Faulkner comment. This guy was clearly all business. Not giving her an inch of breaking from his strict demeanor other than the stray smile here and there. She didn't fault him of course. Her job was vastly different than his. She couldn't imagine having someone's life in your hands, being responsible for other people and their well-being all the time. She couldn’t help her nature though, "You've got to be a writer with that last name. At the very least a closet poetry fan." She grinned, glancing over at him. Faulkner was actually one of her favorite writers. She had done an entire thesis on his writings in college.
He asked where she taught at and she replied, "Lethford Elementary. Home of the Lethford Lions." She found herself grinning again. She loved her school and though elementary teams were a vastly far cry from competing middle and high school sports, she'd been happily present at all football and basketball games. There was nothing cuter than two dozen elementary school kids chasing each other around a gymnasium with uniforms on that were bigger than they were.
Her grin was cut immediately short though as the sound of gunfire came out of nowhere. Lexi was too shocked to scream as everything suddenly moved quickly. Faulkner had grabbed her, pulling her out from the open to behind a car. He told her to stay down and she nodded, adrenaline coursing through her.
He spoke about not being seen, but his voice wasn't exactly certain and she closed her eyes as she wondered what in the world she had gotten herself into. Was it always like this here? She would be the first to admit that keeping inside the lines led to a somewhat sheltered life, but she hadn't thought gunfire was a common occurrence. The soldier cocked his gun and she opened her eyes again, trying to focus on him.
Lexi didn't move as he angled himself around the car. Her wide eyes scanned the area behind them, noting that at least they'd be able to see anyone coming up behind them. She had no idea what time it was, if night was approaching or how they'd get out of this. Another round of gunfire sounded off and she instinctively slid as silently and slowly as she could so she was closer to him, her arms holding herself.
The questions were in the thousands, what was happening? What were they going to do? Was this normal? What did this mean? None of them would help though. She spoke quietly, summoning up all the courage she had, "What do you need?"
When a kid was bleeding on the playground or parents called her in tears because of custody battles, that was always her first response. What do you need? What can I do? She was terrified but that didn't mean she was helpless.
Benjamin enjoyed her upbeat attitude, though he knew he couldn't let himself relax too much. If he wasn't on the job, he'd long have joked along with her about his name. No way was he a closet poetry fan. The only writers he actually still remembered were the classic ones like Shakespeare and Edgar Allan Poe, from his English class back in high school, but he never paid attention or cared much. He wasn't the type to sit and read all day, never mind write things himself. He had mostly been the kid who never could focus or sit still, and he guessed Lexi had one of those in her class as well. Man, he had probably made their job hell.
The questions raced through his mind, but he tried to pick out the important ones that would help in their situation. Possible rebels crossing the borders in spite of the law for whatever reason. He still couldn't see anyone, so he wondered if it was even them that was aimed for in the first place. He looked around for other sources of cover in case this one got compromised, but only saw a few more cars up ahead. Was it worth the risk?
Lexi's voice next to him took him out of his train of thoughts. Benjamin was thankful that she was ready to listen, instead of panicking or disobeying. She had a brave fire burning inside of her for a kindergarten teacher. "I need —" His voice was cut off by the new round of shots, and he ducked down, the bullets flying right over the roof of the car. "Shit!" He cussed. "They know we're down here." He thought about calling back-up for a moment on his radio, but somewhere he felt too much pride to do it. He wanted to show that he could handle it. Maybe overconfidence was going to be his death someday.
From what it sounded like, Benjamin guessed it was only one person. Carrying a machine gun, just like him, and was now most likely reloading. Benjamin looked around the corner with his heart beating in his chest. He saw a glimpse of a man move behind a car. Benjamin turned to Lexi. "Stay here and stay down. I'm gonna push on and see if I can flank him from the side. Unless he specifically wants you, he'll be focused on me mostly," he said, speaking his words soft but quickly. He took a deep breath before making his sprint towards the other car and taking cover there. New gunshots rang around him and he flinched at the sounds. When they stopped again to reload, he took his chance, looked over his cover and shot at his target.
The man got hit in the side and he heard the gun drop on the floor. He sprinted over there and kicked the gun far away, aiming his own rifle at the head of the man. A complete stranger, now bleeding out from the side, holding his hands in the air defeated. Benjamin took one last quick look around to see if anybody else was coming, still on guard. Didn't seem like it.
He had never killed anyone on the job before. Or off the job. He had gotten close many times in his life, but never done it. And he didn't want this time to be the first. Maybe they could stop the bleeding. The stranger was no longer a threat to them, for what he could tell.
"Don't move," he told the stranger in a threatening tone, keeping his eyes ever so focused on his movements, and then shouted over to Lexi. "Lexi, I need you here!"
There seemed to be a small pause and she hoped that maybe whoever had been causing the shooting had ran away. That maybe it had been nothing more than a scare tactic or a bold attempt to show that the military presence wasn't welcomed. She was hoping against hope that that was the case. Faulkner opened his mouth to reply to her and was promptly cut off by a barrage of bullets flying over them. Lexi yelped and covered her ears.
He told her he was moving to flank the shooter and Lexi pushed down a moment of panic as he took off. On one hand she wanted to grab him and demand that he stayed there with her. After all, if something happened to him it was just her alone with someone who had no issues firing bullets at her. Her, alone, completely undefended. On the other hand, she knew she was completely out of her element and that she should let him do his job. Not that he had asked all of her thoughts and opinions on the matter. No, he had just spoken quickly and taken off. She put her back to the car, knees pulled up close to her chest. The shots were close and she covered her ears again as a third round of bullets were discharged.
A man's yell of pain erupted somewhere nearby and Lexi prayed it wasn't the soldier. The loud gunfire had broken into more of a frightening eerie silence and she began trying to prepare herself for what might come. If that meant running or fighting which, if she was being completely honest, would not end well either way for her. Faulkner's voice called for her, thankfully breaking the silence.
She scrambled to get up, her shaking legs doing their best to stay upright. She looked over to where the soldier was and she ran over to him. He was gripping the gun in his hands, the barrel pointing downwards. As she got closer to him she noticed the man on the ground, blood quickly pooling around him. "You shot him?!" Lexi's hand moved to her mouth in shock for half of a second before she shrugged out of her jacket, immediately moving to the man on the ground. Logically she knew that in that situation, the odds were stacked heavily that at least one person was going to be shot that afternoon, but she wasn't thinking about that logical side. All she could see was a young man bleeding out on the road senselessly.
"He needs a doctor." Lexi dropped to her knees, pressing her jacket to the wound on the guy, blood beginning to seep out and around the jacket.
NOTES ; Feel free to have her get held hostage or whatever lol
His heart was still racing and he couldn't stop scanning the area. There was just a feeling inside of him telling him they weren't out of danger just yet, but it was a gut feeling and nothing more. No solid evidence. Nothing he could actually count on.
Benjamin still had the gun at the man when Lexi came around. Only then sunk in the realization that just maybe, this scene could be traumatizing to her. He really hoped that wasn't going to be the case. He needed her help if he wanted to get the stranger out alive. Especially because he wanted to know the motive behind his crime. Was this one man just trying to prove a point? Being reckless and stupid and maybe on drugs? Or was there an entire organization behind him, ready to do this again?
Lexi stated the obvious in disbelief. Of course Benjamin had shot him. "To be fair, he was shooting at us first..." The dry and sarcastic humor just somewhat slipped out. No matter how much he got yelled at for his under-his-breath commentary, it was a part of his personality that he seemed to have no control over.
He didn't have to guide or direct the woman, thankfully, as she kneeled down to the body and held her jacket pressed against the wound. Benjamin took his left hand off the gun to try and fish his phone out of his pocket. Something that wasn't easy, but Lexi's phone was double dead, so he couldn't ask her. He dialed 911 and waited for the operator to pick up. "There's been a shooting at Venshaw Bridge. Need an ambulance and a police car." He gave the exact location before hanging up the phone. The operator had asked him to stay on the line, but he knew he had to make sure they were both covered in case the stranger had brought friends with him. He didn't want another unexpected bullet storm to hurl towards him. One in a day was more than enough.
"They should be here in eight minutes," he said to Lexi. Then he looked back at the man, with fire burning in his eyes. "That woman is saving your life right now, so don't try to lay a finger on her. Or I'll make sure you don't."
Lexi turned her head and gave him an exasperated look before speaking, "Yeah, I realize that but two wrongs don't make a right." She felt her teacher voice kicking in as she addressed the man on the ground as well, "People are dying every day from this virus and you guys think bullets and violence is an acceptable answer?" It was more of a rhetorical question of course and she was mostly talking to herself, knowing that neither of them would ever see her point but she had to say it nevertheless. As she had been speaking, she leaned over him, her free hand moving to his throat, feeling for a pulse. She heard Faulkner call for an ambulance and she pressed her fingertips to the man's throat.
She closed her eyes for a second, trying to feel for his pulse. It was hard to focus on his when her heart was beating so wildly in her own chest. She heard the soldier say the ambulance would be there in eight minutes and she finally felt it. The beating a dull and slow rhythm. She glanced back at Faulkner, her eyes wide. "His pulse is weak. I don't know…" She had no idea what to do other than to apply pressure and keep him awake. Her medical skills were first-aid training at best and here she was wrist-deep in a man who was bleeding out with no idea what she could possibly do next to help him.
She turned back to the man and looked him over as Faulkner threatened his life. She doubted he was in any position to make any threats against her life. She wasn't entirely sure he would still be on this earth in another five minutes. She kept one hand solidly against the wound and the other moved to his pockets. "I might need your help. We need to see if he has a medical ID or anything on him that-" She instantly halted as her hands pulled out not just one but three bags of what she unfortunately knew very well was drugs. She turned sharply to the soldier, fear apparent, "I don't think this was about us."
No sooner had the words left her lips when a shot rang out, a blazing-hot pain searing her shoulder. The impact caused her to fall back, her voice crying out in pain, her hand going to her shoulder and coming away wet.
NOTES ; Credit to the marvelous hayana for coming up with the idea of being shot. Clean blow, right through her shoulder.
Benjamin had long accepted that he would have to be shooting people, and it was hard for him to imagine life any other way. If you want to survive, and if you want to get a job done, you have no choice but to do it. Or else it would be him and her bleeding out on the streets right now... But he knew there wasn't much point in arguing with Lexi. They came from different worlds. The man's body was getting incredibly pale, and even Benjamin had a sinking feeling in his stomach when Lexi said that his pulse was weak. Maybe, just maybe, he had become a killer today.
He averted his focus to helping Lexi. They both seemed to have basic first aid knowledge and how to treat gunshot wounds until you can get a medic, so that was a good sign. She started to search his pockets and pulled out three bags of drugs. Well, there was the reason they had been attacked just now. He was slightly relieved that it wasn't about him or Lexi personally. Simply a junkie with a gun getting way too high... He had a minor flashback to the times where he himself had worked with drug dealers, wondering that if he hadn't changed his life, he may have ended up just like him.
But before anything else could happen, another shot rang through the air. His eyes widened as he saw Lexi fall back, but his heart broke even more when he saw the crimson blood on her hand. Fear, anger, and guilt came over him like a crashing wave in an ocean storm, but he pushed all of them down as he spun around. The shot, where did it come from? He already regretted calling the ambulance so soon — despite them going to have police backup soon, too, because all he wanted was to move them both as far away from this place as he could. The chances of there being more than one attacker was rising up.
Another shot rang through the air and he swore he could feel the bullet whizz just past him with a zooming noise. He got down on the floor and aimed for the source. Luckily for him, he managed to get a view of his opponent. Panic rushed through him, and it took a couple of bullets before he managed a direct hit, and sent another person down. He scanned the area: are there any more?
Benjamin went back to Lexi, letting his gun go for just one moment. Pros of being a soldier was that he always carried bandages with him and specifically ones for gunshot wounds. "Don't move," he told her, before taking out the bandage and wrapping it around the area in her shoulder. "The pressure is supposed to feel very uncomfortable. If it doesn't, it's not stopping the bleeding." He hated having to put her through this. He had only done it once before in a real situation, but that had been on the toughest soldier of the squad. He couldn't tell whether or not the bullet had struck an important artery or not. He didn't know if there were more coming behind him. He didn't know anything and it frustrated the hell out of him.
He heard sirens in the distance. "Finally," he muttered to himself, picking the gun back up. He looked at Lexi. "You're gonna be fine. Just stay with me."
Lexi fell back, the ground making a solid impact with her body. The pain in her shoulder was an all-consuming fire, taking away any and all ability to form words. She found herself gasping through the pain, vaguely aware that tears were coming from her eyes. She angled her head just the fraction of an inch to find the soldier who she assumed was nearby, the action causing a wave of nausea to course over her. She didn’t immediately see him and she wondered for a moment if he had been shot as well. If she was now alone.
There was something wet and warm touching the back of her neck, seeping from behind her body, or perhaps from the front, she wasn't sure. She numbly moved with her other hand to try and stop the bleeding as a loud sound went off nearby. Her fingers were slick, unable to apply any pressure so she dropped it back to her side. The searing pain gave her enough of a dull break so her voice could finally speak, a pitiful sob breaking through as the sound of more bullets being fired exploded around them.
She was going to die. The thought began to solidify in her mind as the soldier suddenly appeared in her vision field. He said something that she didn't catch and the urge to apologize for not hearing him popped up in her mind. She couldn't make the words come out though, she could barely force her lungs to keep sucking in oxygen, much less have a conversation.
Suddenly his hands were near her, and something was pressed sharply into her shoulder and the world went red. She cried out in pain, her hands beginning to shake. The blinding fire shot through her body and she shook her head. Her hands moved to where his was, intending to push it away and the world began to go from red to fuzzy.
A blessed numb feeling had edged into her senses and she finally began to settle, closing her eyes. This was good, this was alright, she told herself. Her thoughts slowly turning pleasantly numb and vacant, like they were someone else's. "Paperwork. The….paperwork." She tried to pull up the words that she needed to say. She knew they were important but her brain was having a hard time stringing the correct words together. "The school papers." She gave up after that, assuming that the person responsible for them would know what she was talking about.