The Living Dead (Book 1): Contagion (12 page)

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Authors: L.I. Albemont

Tags: #zombies

BOOK: The Living Dead (Book 1): Contagion
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Chapter 13

 

 

 

 

 

 Hell is empty
And all the devils are here.

The Tempest

           -William Shakespeare

 

 

 

 

 

            Charles motioned for them to move down the street, away from the cemetery side of the building. To Virginia her footsteps crunching in the snow sounded appallingly loud. The three of them rounded the library and passed into the narrow parking lot for the attorney’s office next door. An enormous white oak jutted up against the security fence that marked the boundary of the service entrance to the hospital. Charles entwined his fingers and made a mount for Virginia to climb to the lowest tree branch. She climbed up until she reached a branch that overhung the hospital side of the fence. Creaking branches below told her Charles and Gabriella were close behind. She moved cautiously as far out as she felt the branch would support her weight; then dropped to the snow covered asphalt below. Her feet slid out from under her and she hit the ground, winded and struggling to catch her breath. An excited drawn out moan sounded to her left and she turned to see an enormous man, infected, blue gray lips open and teeth bared. He wore a torn, brown UPS uniform. One foot was broken almost completely off but he walked on the point of his shin, the sharp bone stabbing the ice as he closed in on her. He had a look of frantic hunger on his face, his hands pulling the entrails out of the wide-open hole in his abdomen, bringing them up to his mouth only to spit them out seconds later.

             Still trying to gulp in air, Virginia rolled over onto her back, willing her lungs to work again and saw Gabriella in the tree looking down at her, horrified and seemingly too shocked to move. Not wanting to use her gun and draw more of the infected, she reached for the knife in her boot, but before she could draw it, the dead man was on her. He grabbed her arm and pulled her up, sending a wrenching pain through her shoulder. His teeth closed down on her jacket, bruising her arm through the leather. Virginia struggled in vain, this guy was huge and not letting go. He fastened one enormous paw on her face and yanked her head toward his open mouth. She pulled both legs up off the ground. That threw him off balance enough for him to fall, unfortunately directly on top of her. Once again, she couldn’t breathe and as she kicked and bucked to no effect, she heard a gunshot, so close her ears rang. Someone rolled the now unmoving deliveryman off her. Gabriella and Charles helped her to her feet and they all stepped carefully around the mess of skull fragments and brain tissue.

            “Ok? Did he bite you?” She shook her head, still breathless. “Good, let’s move.” Charles turned and led the way down the concrete ramp to the delivery entrance. One of the double doors stood partially open, and fluorescent lighting spilled out onto the snow. They moved inside cautiously but the corridor was empty, no blood on the floor, and no indication of anything amiss.

            “Ladies, this is where I leave you. I have to try to find the woman we saw in the graveyard. If she’s still alive, I’ll try to bring her back to the library. I don’t have to tell you to get in and out as quickly as you can. I don’t know where the hospital dispensary is so you’re going to have to find that on your own. Let’s plan to meet back at the front doors in, say, twenty minutes?”

            He walked away into the dark. Gabriella‘s hands shook, Virginia noticed, but she strode determinedly ahead. Doors on both sides of the hallway were marked with either the room’s function or else just numbers. Nothing said “Dispensary”. One door marked “Supplies” contained cleaning supplies and other chemicals. Just ahead, the hall branched into two corridors.

            “Let’s not make the classic “Let’s split up” mistake. Which way do you think? Right or left?

            “Left. That will take us closer to the elevators so maybe it is closer to them for convenience sake, yes?” Gabriella said.

            They walked on. Gabriella’s sneakers squeaked on the shiny floor. The building smelled of cleaner with something more foul underneath. At the next branching, they heard a dull banging sound growing louder once they turned in the direction they thought would take them to the elevators. They both pulled their guns and sidled along the wall as the sound grew in intensity. It came from a set of (presumably) locked metal doors just ahead. Something was hitting them so hard they vibrated. A few feet farther down the wall, a set of small windows allowed them to look inside.

            They saw a green tiled room containing a number of gurneys, three stainless steel sinks, and large round drain covers in the floor. Two dead children, one probably twelve, the other around seven, were slamming into the metal doors. Their wrists were bound with surgical tape. Their legs were free though tape still hung from their ankles. Three more children writhed and thrashed about on the floor with arms and legs still trussed. All had tightly curled hair and skin a chalky dark gray. Virginia realized they were probably looking at the orphaned children from Haiti. There was nothing they could do for them.

            Backtracking quickly, they turned right at the previous branching. This led past the hospital laundry and a service elevator. Still no dispensary. Virginia estimated they had been searching for about forty five minutes and she was worried. They had little chance of making it through the heavily infested upper floors. If they didn’t find the medicine on this floor, they would have to leave without it and she feared Gabriella would refuse.

            Finally they finished searching every room they could access, winding up in the maintenance supervisor’s office. Gabriella sat down at a desk, put her head in her hands, and began to cry. Virginia stood by the door, feeling helpless and angry.

            Gabriella stood up and paced angrily around the room. Eyes narrowed and fists clenched she kicked anything she could, trashcans, the copy machine, all while a torrent of Spanish poured out of her mouth.

            “Dios mío, estoy tan cerca! Todo este hospital y nada! El por qué, la razón…” she continued to rave as she knocked over a coat rack, revealing a silver, soft-sided briefcase on the floor, hidden before by the long folds of a winter coat. At the sight of it, she stopped and fell to her knees, a look of dawning hope on her face. She unzipped the side of the case and the flap fell open to reveal neatly packaged syringes, needles and vials. Frozen gel packs maintained the temperature. It was a diabetic travel kit that must have belonged to a hospital employee. Gabriella cradled it in her arms and smiled at Virginia.

            “Tiempo para ir ahora” Virginia understood perfectly. She grabbed one of the overturned trashcans and they left the room and returned to the service entrance. The parking lot outside looked clear, except for the remains of the infected deliveryman. The upside down trashcan was just the right height for a boost back into the oak. They climbed up and over to the other side of the fence, Gabriella with the kit hung round her neck. Still crouching in the branches, they surveyed the area for infected but saw nothing. Snow was falling still, erasing their footprints from earlier. The only sound that broke the silence was- Virginia felt her whole body tense- a liquid slurping sound.

            It came from behind the dumpster in the corner. She looked up at Gabriella in the branch above and put her finger to her lips. Gabriella nodded. They dropped to the pavement as silently as they could and Virginia held her gun in front of her. Their footsteps crunched but the wet gulping continued. They rounded the side of the dumpster.

            A woman crouched over a body on the ground. She buried her face in the stomach of her victim and then sat back, shaking her head to pull the chunk of dark meat free from the corpse. Though they stood less than five feet from her, she seemed unaware of them. The front of her blouse was soaked with blood and gore, her skirt filthy. She was shoeless, her stockings torn and shredded. Heart sinking, Virginia recognized Sue Norris, former public defender for the town of Tunbridge Wells.

            As she chewed noisily and groped through the exposed viscera, the body on the ground shifted and a police officer’s badge on the front of the victim’s shirt glinted briefly in the streetlight. Gabriella stifled an anguished sob.

            Sue turned her head in their direction. A dirt coated flap of skin on the left side of her face hung loose from the empty eye socket on down. Her left eye dangled as well. Her hand still digging in the intestines of her meal, she tried to stand but her hand was either stuck inside or she lacked the intelligence to understand she had to let go before she could get up. The ensuing struggle might have been comical in another situation. The corpse shifted again and the face fell to one side. It was Kincaid. He wouldn’t be coming back as the living dead. Someone had already put a bullet through his temple.

            Without hesitation, she walked over to Sue, grabbed her by the hair, stuck her gun in the bloody mouth, and fired. A chunk filled black mist spattered the snow and the former PD sagged to the ground. Virginia and Gabriella sidestepped the foul smelling mess and walked on. Something had gone wrong. Charles could fill her in and if he wasn’t back yet, Carson would know. Larry’s presence in their stronghold was an unfortunate fact and she wouldn’t be surprised if he had something to do with this.

            The thick wooden library doors stood open and Gabriella had already disappeared inside. Virginia stood in the snow, trying to make sense of the scene. Whatever had caused Kincaid to leave, he would have shut the doors behind him. The snow in the street was heavily trampled and footsteps led in several directions. A slow shuffle and then a crunch sounded around the corner and a staggering corpse advanced toward her.  More and more grotesque, shambling infected closed in, hissing at her with red stained teeth. She froze. She knew she had to get inside but she feared what she would find there. She shot a fast moving one in the head from five feet away. All her reflexes told her to move and still she stood there. Finally, her survival instincts kicked in. She ran for the steps, slamming the doors behind her.

            There were no signs of violence near the circulation desk or in the hallway. She checked on Daniel. He was still asleep. In the back office, she found Gabriella with Mari. The open insulin kit and a used syringe lay on the floor. Larry’s dog still stood guard by the cot and a low growl came from his throat until he recognized her. Gabriella held Mari’s hands to her cheek and smiled.

            “I think she will be better now. She just needs sleep.”

            Virginia brushed the little girl’s hair from her cheek. She seemed to be resting easier.

            “Have you seen anyone else? I only found Daniel.”

            “No, no one but I have been only here. I can help you look now I think.”

            They searched but found no one. Virginia went back to the reading room and pulled her shotgun out from behind the set of Encyclopedia Britannica. Her jacket pockets were still full of shells as well as rounds for the handgun.

            “Carson wouldn’t leave the children alone. He has his problems but he wouldn’t abandon children. I wouldn’t put anything past Larry though. Charles should be back any moment. Let’s talk to him and see if he has any ideas.” Gabriella nodded and went back to Marisol. Virginia leaned against the front doors and slowly slid to the ground. She would wait here to be sure she heard Charles when he got back. Raspy moans and scratching at the door followed her into dreams.

 

 

 

Chapter 14

 

 

 

 

 

For though it be something wonderful to tell, that any should have hearts so hardened in the midst of such a calamity, yet certain it is that all sorts of villainies… were then practiced in the town as openly as ever.

-Journal of the Plague Year

 

 

 

 

 

            She woke an hour or so later, thirsty and in need of a bathroom. The men’s room was closest and, with no men in residence, she stumbled in and that’s where she found Charles. He was unconscious; his face and hair streaked and matted with blood. She and Gabriella dragged him carefully into the reading room and wrapped him in their coats. A jagged laceration on his scalp bled copiously. They cleaned it with paper towels and doused it with the Stolichnaya from the librarian’s desk but there was little else they could do.

            Virginia grabbed her backpack and guns making sure both firearms were loaded. Her backpack fell over when she tossed it on the chesterfield and the edges of a manila envelope slid out the top. Bill’s papers. That would keep her awake so she could keep watch on Charles. She thumbed through them and settled in to read.

 

 

           
The following letter is from a private collection of correspondence between Sir Walter Raleigh and his wife, Lady Elizabeth Raleigh (nee Throckmorton). Raleigh journeyed to the land of Guiana in 1595 and returned with two natives, whom he presented to the Queen at Greenwich Palace that same year. Although he later wrote an account of the voyage entitled
The Discoverie of the Large, Rich, and Beautiful Empire of Guiana
, which became a bestseller of the time, he did not mention the events in Dorset described below
.

 

My Lord

            I write you concerning the contagion introduced into our household with the arrival of the youth Cayoworaco and his compatriot Arawayo. The mischief done unto us at Sherborne surpasses belief. I have taken steps to conceal news of this illness and it is my prayer that we see no more of it. My poor hand trembles as I recall our ordeal.

            Cayoworaco fell ill upon your departure for Plymouth. We thought him merely fatigued of his journey. He from the first complained much of the coldness of our climate compared to his father’s land of Guiana. Afflicted as if by an ague, his shivering was soon accompanied by vomiting. The coldness of his body increased and he succumbed to death at one hour before noon. My sorrow was great, it being my fondest hope to bring this young savage to the love of Christ and for him to return to his father’s land and bring the Good News to his people. Vicar was with him in his last hours and being much grieved by the suffering he saw, remained to pray at the bedside.

            It being laundry day, and cousin Brayford having the toothache, I left to supervise the women on the lawn. After a time, vicar came outside and took his leave and I sent Peg and Eliza to wash the body. The lad died unbaptised and unshriven so I directed that ground be prepared outside the churchyard in which to lay his poor body to rest. I directed my man Watt to find Arawayo and break the news of his chief’s young son’s death. When told, Arawayo was much agitated and made us to understand that poor Cayoworaco must have his head removed from his body before burial, in accordance with their customs. Such barbary! Would that we had heeded this advice in time.

            Eliza found me and declared Cayoworaco’s body was not to be found. I returned with her to the bedside which was indeed empty. We were much bemused and wondering when began a commotion out of doors under the keep. Hurrying thither we found Peg fallen under the line of drying bed linens, lying on her side and drenched in blood. Her arm was torn from its socket. A hissing sound alerted us and we turned to see Cayoworaco, not dead but fully restored to life- but such a transformation! His mouth dripped blood as he gnawed on the arm that he had wrenched from the girl. His eyes were filmed over as with the whiteness of old age. He came at us anon only to be felled by Arawayo. The two grappled and fought until Arawayo, seizing the iron pot set out to boil the linen, struck Cayoworaco divers times until his head was a stinking pulp of bone and flesh. He then walked over to poor Peg and proceeded to shatter her brains. Our horror froze us and we had not the wits to flee. I felt surely we were the next to die but Arawayo merely sat on the ground and inspected the wounds of his body. All this time, the household watched us from the gate to the kitchen garden, ready to flee if approached. Cowards! They did not make a move to save any of us. My anger waxed hot and I approached them intent on upbraiding the lot just as my man Watt appeared from the keep entrance. He had armed himself with a claymore and flew forward with the vigor of the warrior he had been in his youth. Confused by the placidity of Arawayo who remained seated calmly on the ground, Watt stopped and looked askance at me. Together we cautiously approached the savage. I saw wounds on his body that appeared to me to be bites. I entreated him to explain to me this fantastic occurrence.  A pained expression crossed his face. He drew a flint dagger from the sash around his waist and slashed his throat from ear to ear. Blood cascaded forth and he lay dead.

            I am left to ponder this event and search for a cause. Our household has been cautioned to speak of this to no one and I hope any rumors soon die away. Vicar believes all to be a result of a sudden brain fever of Arawayo, a tropical disease brought from Guiana. I revealed not to him the revival of Cayoworaco and his role. All remains have now been buried.

            Poor Peg’s mother and father are inconsolable. She was their only child.

            Although it seemed barbarous, I allowed Watt to sever the head of Arawayo. I deemed it a worthy precaution.

 

Your loving wife,

Bess

           

             It seemed incredible this wasn’t well known. Perhaps at the time Raleigh and his wife didn’t want negative aspects of his voyages to get out. Explorers of that period waged a constant PR campaign to woo investors to finance their risky and dangerous ventures. It was an amazing story. Were some of the natives carriers of the disease all their lives?  It must have been a different strain.

            Charles stirred and opened his eyes. He tried to sit up but collapsed in a fit of coughing. Virginia knelt behind him and propped him up on her knees. The coughing calmed and he took a sip of water from the glass she held.

            “Can you talk?”

            “Sort of.” His voice came out as a croak.

            “What happened?”

            “More water?” She helped him drink.

            “But first, did you find the insulin?” Virginia nodded. He relaxed a little. “After I left you, I made a wide circle around the courthouse to get to the far side of the cemetery. Those ghouls were still massing at the fence on this side but hadn’t broken through. That woman that we saw was Sue Norris. I found her near the north gate. She was bit; one of those things tore half her face off and her eye was just hanging. I didn’t know what to do so I helped her up and half carried her back here. Carson let us in and that’s when it hit the fan. Your neighbor took one look at her, drew his gun and started yelling at me to take her outside or he’d kill her. That wasn’t going to happen. She was still a living, suffering human being and scared to death. Larry wouldn‘t stop hollering. Daniel woke up and was crying for you, then the dog came out and started howling like the devil was in the room. Finally, Kincaid came up behind, knocked Larry down and took his gun. He quieted down after that and slinked off.” He took another sip of water.

            “Sue didn’t last long. She bled out. When it was over, Kincaid volunteered to take her out and do what had to be done. We picked her up and were carrying her out the door but we‘d waited too long. She revived and ripped into Kincaid’s arm. She got a good bite too. He shook her off but she was in full hunger mode by then and kept coming at him. It was all I could do to toss her out and get the doors closed. Larry showed up to help with that. I cleaned out the bite but Kincaid knew what was coming. He said he needed to do some thinking and went up to the roof. Next thing I know, Larry came running in saying he saw Kincaid fall from the roof. I should’ve made him go home when all this started. He stayed to help me and now he’s dead because of it.”

            “Or he might have died on the way home. No place is safe. This isn’t your fault.”

            “Yes it is.
I
brought Sue in here.
I
caused this.” He closed his eyes and leaned back. Virginia thought he had gone to sleep but then he spoke.

            “The bastard jumped me and took my gun. I remember coming to and trying to get to the bathroom to get some of this blood off then nothing until I woke up and saw you.”

            “He’s gone. The doors were open when Gabriella and I got back. We’re lucky the infected didn’t wander inside. The children were asleep but we didn’t think anyone else was here. Carson‘s gone too. I‘m worried.”

            “Carson wouldn’t leave those children alone.”

            “No. That‘s why I‘m worried.” She rose and walked to the window. The wind howled and gusted, driving swirls of snow around the lurching dead. “Well, one reason anyway. The other is- Gabriella and I saw Kincaid’s body. Someone shot him in the head.”

            “He must have shot himself as he stepped off the roof. I should never have let him go up there. I saw the look on his face when he realized he would turn into one of those things.”

            “You couldn‘t have known.”

            “He was my deputy, one of my people. I let him die.”         

            “You didn‘t
let
him die, Charles. He made his own-” she stopped as they heard a series of dull thuds. They echoed distantly from above. They looked at each other. “The roof? How did they get to the roof?” Virginia grabbed her shotgun and ran to the stairs.

            The roof entrance door was jammed. Someone had completely mangled the doorknob; bent it so it wouldn’t turn. The thuds continued but weakened then ceased altogether.

            “Ok, it could be one of them BUT they don’t give up that fast if ever. Maybe it’s-” she kicked the knob hard, it shuddered but held. The banging started up and she heard a shout this time. She kicked the knob again. Nothing. She yelled, “Stand back!” and took aim at the knob.

            The report rang her ears and the recoil from the shotgun hurt. Worse than that- the door still wouldn’t open. A hand closed on her shoulder and she spun around, taking aim at- Charles. He held up both hands, an ax in his left one.

            “You know, that shooting out the lock thing only works in movies.” he said mildly. He smashed the doorjamb until it was loose enough to pull the lock past it. Carson fell inside.

            They got him onto one of the reading room sofas and wrapped him in their coats. His lips were blue; his hair rimed with ice. He shivered, shook, and couldn’t speak for several minutes.

            “I’ll kill ‘im. If I ever see that s.o.b again I’ll kill ‘im.” His teeth chattered with cold.

            “What happened?”

            “Larry. When I seen him following Kincaid up to the roof, I figured he was up to no good. He didn’t like Kincaid none. He don’t like you neither Charles. Now you and me been on opposite sides of certain issues from time to time but we kept our relationship professional. No hard feelings on either side.” Charles nodded in acknowledgement but barely suppressed a smile.

            “I followed him up. He went after Kincaid and I heard him saying, ‘Do it before you turn’ then something about ‘dying with dignity.’ Kincaid told him to leave ‘im alone and walked over to the edge of the roof and just stood, lookin’ down. I heard Larry say ‘That’s you if you don’t do something about it.’ Kincaid ignored him. That’s when Larry pulled a gun out of his boot and shot him cold dead in the head. I know I yelled something and he turned and saw me. I ran for the door but I slipped and must have knocked myself out. When I came to, he was gone and I was trapped out there. I was near froze to death.”

            Charles’ expression was murderous. Virginia went up to the landing. The shotgun had kicked hard and her side hurt. She lifted her shirt and saw fresh blood. She sighed and tried to remember where the first aid kit was when she heard a chime and felt a vibration in her pocket. It took her a few seconds to realize it was her phone. Hands trembling she pulled it out. A voicemail! Why hadn’t she heard it ring? The screen showed her mother in law’s number. She punched in her password and heard her daughter’s voice.

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