BIOHAZARD (6 page)

Read BIOHAZARD Online

Authors: Tim Curran

BOOK: BIOHAZARD
10.99Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

When we didn’t move fast enough, one of the soldiers cracked a few shots over our heads. But even that only made us drag ourselves forward. When we got to the perimeter of the heap, staring at all those rotting husks and bird-pecked faces and trailing limbs, the rest of the crew just looked at me. Lately, they’d been looking at me a lot. I guess I was the leader of the revolt that we all knew was coming. And I could feel it gathering momentum…electric with potential, just waiting to explode. I think they could, too. We were waiting for a catalyst to light the fuse and it was coming, God yes, it was certainly coming.


Let’s do it,” I told them. “Let’s load that fucking hopper. Then we’ll see.”

We went at it.

It was revolting even by the standards set by other such jobs. The corpses were so ripe they pulled apart like boiled chicken. Arms came off, legs came off, moldering flesh pulled right off the bones beneath. We backed the truck up close as we could because this rank, evil-smelling mess had to be thrown in the hopper piecemeal. It took hours. We sweated in our filthy biosuits, enveloped in a gagging cloud of flies and grave-stench.

Somewhere during the process, Specs lost it.

He usually didn’t so much as clear his throat around the soldiers, but today was different. Maybe he, too, was feeding off that potential. He was all assholes and elbows, crouched over and digging into the cold cuts, just lost in his work. Sinking his gloved hands deep into that seething, crawling rot, firing it behind him, arms pinwheeling, letting it fly into the hopper. A corpse-worm slid out of the remains of a child and he stomped it to white mush before it could do so much as writhe in the sunlight.


That’s it!” Weeks told him, keeping his distance, his carbine balanced over one shoulder. “That’s the way, Mama’s Boy! Get that shit in the hopper! Got to it, you sonofabitch!”

This spurred Specs into greater feats of corpse clearing. He dug into the mess, letting limbs and bones and globs of offal fly, almost knocking me on my ass with a stray femur. Then he happened upon a head. The head of a teenage girl. The face was nothing but fungus and corpse jelly oozing from the white skull beneath…but it stopped him dead.

He held up that head and it had long red hair hanging from the scalp. Hair that was greasy and clotted with filth, but red all the same.


Fuck you doing, Mama’s Boy?” one of the soldiers asked.

And everyone was kind of wondering the same.

Specs stood there, trembling, holding that decayed head up. Slime dripped from it and loathsome black beetles crawled over the backs of his hands and up his arms.

With a gagging, strangled cry, he dropped it.

It hit the pavement like a moist, soft pumpkin and broke right apart at his feet. Beetles poured from the shattered skull, a crawling flood of them.

Weeks stepped back even further, of course.

Specs kept making that gagging sound.

The head was the catalyst we were waiting for.

I stood up from the carrion pile. My white biosuit was smeared gray and black with corpse waste. I brushed some stray maggots off my sleeve. “Hey? You okay, Specs…
Specs?
You okay, man?”


Get to work!” Weeks shouted.

But we were ignoring him. Specs was having an episode and maybe we were filthy with decaying flesh and corpse slime and maybe we spent our days juggling human remains at gunpoint, but all this bonded us together. Made us stronger. Made us care for each other and in the process, made us a little more human than the drones with the guns.


I said, get to fucking work!” Weeks called out, popping a few rounds into the air.


Go fuck yourself,” Paulson told him.

Weeks took two trembling steps forward, ejecting the magazine from his tactical carbine and slapping a fresh one in place. “Hell did he just say to me?” he asked his soldiers.


Told you—” one of them began, suppressing a mad desire to giggle “―told you to go fuck yourself…
sir.”

Weeks raged but we paid him no mind. We were clustered around Specs, touching him, reassuring him, while he went on in a whining voice about his sister, about Darlene. Darlene and her beautiful red hair and how she rotted away in her bed of typhoid fever.

About this time, we realized that Weeks was shouting at us. We turned and he had his weapon on us, his hands shaking on it. He was either scared to death or so pissed off he could’ve passed nails.


Mr. Fucking Useless!” he cried. “Step away from those Shitheads! Do it! Do it! Do it!
You better goddamn well do it right fucking now, you miserable ass-sucking squeeze of shit! I’ll drop you where you stand! Yer a fucking walking dead man!”

Paulson pulled off his helmet and threw it at Weeks who nearly jumped right out of his suit trying to avoid the filthy thing. It hit the ground and rolled across the parking lot.


No,” he said. “I refuse.”


No? No? No?
Fuck you mean, you refuse?”
Weeks said, his voice very dry like all the spit had just dried on his tongue.
“You can’t refuse me! You can’t fucking well refuse me! Are you out of yer fucking mind? Are you? Well…ARE YOU?”


Yes sir, believe so,” Paulson said.

Specs, Jakoby, and me stood tight with him, ringing him in so that Weeks would have to shoot through us to get at him.


Step away from him!” Weeks ordered us. “Get away from him or I’ll cap every one of you!”


Go ahead!” Specs shouted. “Go right ahead!”

Weeks moved in still closer and so did his soldiers and I was figuring this was it, this was how it ended and what a goddamn revolting way to go, standing there knee deep in human remains in filthy suits with flies buzzing all over us.

Weeks was going to shoot, there was no doubt of it, but then Specs reached into the hopper and grabbed an arm that was bloated white. “Hungry, asshole? How about a wing?” he threw the arm and it hit one of the soldiers with a moist thud that put him on his ass. He screamed.

We started laughing.


How about a thigh?” Jakoby said and heaved a maggoty leg.


Got me a breast here,” Paulson said, gathering up a withered trunk. “At least I think it’s a breast…” He let it fly.

Then all of us just went mad with the idea.

Limbs and bones, entrails and mucid clots of flesh started flying, raining down on the soldiers, making them jump and duck as they were spattered with carrion and maggots. Weeks tried to dart back, but I tossed a head that broke apart and splattered him with wormy gray matter.

He, of course, screamed.

Screamed and went right down on his ass.

One of the soldiers said, “Screw this,” and turned, jogging across the parking lot.


Get back here!” Weeks called out to him.
“You’re deserting your post!”

But the guy didn’t listen and Weeks shot him, dropped him right there.

After that, it was sheer pandemonium.

One of the soldiers shot Jakoby as he tossed handfuls of grave matter at him. And about the time he went down—staggering, bullet-ridden, but managing to crash into the guy who had shot him—I threw a loop of bowels at Weeks and they struck him right in the chest leaving a gray, snaking stain on his white biosuit. He screamed and tossed his rifle.


I’m contaminated! I’m unclean! I’m filthy! Dirty! Dirty! Dirty!”
he shrieked out from inside his helmet, rolling around on the pavement, maybe trying to wipe the putrescence off himself.

The other soldier had gotten tangled up in Jakoby and finally succeeded in shoving him aside. He brought up his rifle as Paulson rushed him with a rotting body in his arms. He shot him. Gave him two three-round volleys and Paulson fell at his feet, hitting the pavement with the corpse that just simply exploded on impact.

The soldier would have had us, too, had fate not intervened at that moment.

Temporarily blinded from a spray of rancid flesh, his plexiglass helmet bubble was black and dripping with juice and bits of meat. He stripped his helmet off and threw it aside. And at that precise moment, one of the corpse-worms slid out of the belly of the cadaver that Paulson had dropped.

It was one of the biggest I had ever seen.

At first, I thought it was a section of swollen bowel spilling out from the corpse’s belly, but then it
moved,
it coiled over the pavement, threading in and out of the stiff like rubbery white yarn. It was huge, flattened-out and segmented, shining with slime and drainage. It was making an almost angry humming sound that was high and strident.

The soldier saw it about the time it rose up from the corpse’s belly with a juicy, succulent noise. It didn’t have eyes that anyone could see, but it seemed to know where he was. That humming grew positively ear-shattering in its intensity. The worm’s body swelled-up, thickening, growing bulbous like some impossibly fleshy penis. The bulb or head inflated, too.

The soldier brought his carbine to bear.

But the worm struck first: it shot an inky stream of juice into his face and the effect was instantaneous. He screamed and fell to his knees, his hands clutching his face…only his face was no longer a face as such, but something soft and pulpy that was squirting out between his fingers.

As the worm retreated, me and Specs went over to Weeks.

He was still whining and crying out in a high girlish voice about being unclean, crawling about on all fours. We just looked down on him, then we started kicking him. And we kept kicking him until he went limp.

Then we dragged his inert form over to the hopper.

We stripped his suit off.

And threw his ass in.

Then we started tossing bodies and body parts on top of him, everything we could find until he was buried in entrails and torsos and limbs, shivering beneath a blanket of carrion and graveworms. Somewhere during the process, he came awake, fighting and screaming, trying to free himself from the putrefying flesh and greening meat. He screamed and clawed.

And Specs, giggling, pulled the lever and the blades came scooping down.

Before Weeks disappeared, we saw him in there tangled in bowels and husks, his arm wedged into a slimy ribcage. And we also saw a fat white corpse-worm slide from a body and investigate his face.

Then the blades pushed him into the bin with the rest and the ram compacted it all with a crunching, pulping noise and fetid juice ran from the drain holes at the bottom of the truck.

That was it.

Specs and I tossed aside our suits, lit cigarettes like workmen after a hard day on the job, and walked away from it all. We went looking for a car. We were going to Cleveland.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CLEVELAND, OHIO

 

1

Cleveland had a real bad rat problem, even worse than Youngstown. At night, hordes of them would come up out of the sewers and cellars and take to the streets in massive swarms like driver ants, devouring anything in their path. They were all rabid and incredibly vicious. By moonlight, you could see them down there, so many greasy gray bodies that you could have crossed the street walking on their backs and never once touched pavement. I saw them take down dog packs and street gangs, leave nothing but bones behind.

Other books

The Masterful Mr. Montague by Stephanie Laurens
Look How You Turned Out by Diane Munier
Lost in His Arms by Carla Cassidy
Divinity Road by Martin Pevsner
CFNM Revenge Tales by Gray, AJ
Nobody Knows by Mary Jane Clark