S.W. Tanpepper's GAMELAND: Season Two Omnibus (Episodes 9-11) (95 page)

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Authors: Saul Tanpepper

Tags: #horror, #cyberpunk, #apocalyptic, #post-apocalyptic, #urban thriller, #suspense, #zombie, #undead, #the walking dead, #government conspiracy, #epidemic, #literary collection, #box set, #omnibus, #jessie's game, #signs of life, #a dark and sure descent, #dead reckoning, #long island, #computer hacking, #computer gaming, #virutal reality, #virus, #rabies, #contagion, #disease

BOOK: S.W. Tanpepper's GAMELAND: Season Two Omnibus (Episodes 9-11)
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“What do you mean ‘taken over'?” Lyssa asked, her voice rising in despair. “They just need some supplies! Can't they just tell whoever's there what they need and why they need it? They need to hurry up!”

“Taken over, but not by the living,” he explained. “It's been overrun by infected.”

For a moment, nobody spoke. The only sounds were Cassie's weakening struggles and her muffled grunts and cries.

Drew stood up and gestured at the boy for the phone. When he connected with Marion, he told them what was happening. “I'm driving over.” There was a pause, then: “Just stay put. I'll be there as soon as I can.”

“What can you do that they can't?” Lyssa cried.

He turned and looked at her for several seconds, as if trying to decide what to say. He took a deep breath, turned to Jeremy instead, and said, “Get back on the air. See if you can drum up some help. And hurry.”

He took another look down at Cassie, twisting and groaning on the floor. “You two,” he said to Lyssa and the boy, “stay here. I'll be back soon with supplies. I promise.”

He took Lyssa by the shoulders and drew her to the side. “Do not leave the house. I give you my word I'm going to do everything I can to save your daughter.”

His voice was strong and reassuring, his words consoling. But the look on his face told another story. Lyssa knew that he didn't believe Cassie had much longer to live. He wasn't going to the hospital to bring back supplies. He was going to fetch Ramon back to say goodbye to his daughter before she passed.

 

CHAPTER SEVENTY

People, I know there are a few of you who are listening, who can hear me. The faithful few, or many, I don't know how many anymore. I hope it's a lot. I hope there are still a lot of you out there, alive, capable of turning the dial. Capable of listening and understanding this hot fucked up mess we've gotten ourselves into.

So it's all come to pass, hasn't it? I told you it would, months ago. I told you the dead were among us, walking among us, working among us. And now they are running rampant over our fair island, this long, idyllic land which has been home to many, a playground of the privileged few. The dead have woken, and they are now claiming this place as their own.

Someone miscalculated, badly. And now we are paying the price for that mistake.

The government will try and deny it. They will twist the truth so that it fits their agenda. I don't know exactly what that story will be, but it will undoubtedly be fallacious. Do not believe their version of the events unfolding here. They will claim that this is all sudden, but that will be a lie. I've seen it first-hand. This disaster has been unfolding, not for days, but for weeks. Maybe even months.

Long Island, folks, is lost, and that's how they always intended it to happen. Don't you think it's convenient that the outbreak would occur in a place which could be easily isolated, cut off from the rest of the world? Close the bridges and tunnels. Stop the ferries and ground the planes. How many people managed to get off the island before they closed it off? A few tens of thousands? I doubt even that many.

How many are still trapped here?

How many will die here in the next few days?

How many will rise again?

Millions would be my guess.

Fight back, people! You're already dead! Come out of your hiding places! Take back what the government's agents have stolen from us! The dead are giving us a run for our money, but we can stop them! We can turn the tide! We must fight to take it back from them! Take back the hospitals! Take back the police stations! Take back the—

Shit! Already? They've found me. I must move.

Listen, people, there is a hospital in Melville overrun by the infected. It's in the middle of Long Island. People, if you can hear me, go there. They need your help. There's a little girl desperately in need of lifesaving medicine. Go there, people, and—

I have to go. Please, just go and help them. And don't get bitten.

Until next time, this is Jay Bird signing off for now.

 

CHAPTER SEVENTY ONE

Drew was horrified at the numbers of infected on the streets. Never in his nightmares had he imagined it happening like this.

No, that wasn't quite true. He'd known it was possible from the very first moment he learned the truth about Daniels's work at the Pentagon, now five years past. He'd feared it. He'd envisioned a time when the world might become overrun by the dead, and it was that image which drove him every day to make sure it never happened. Two and a half years ago, he'd lost everything trying to stop it— himself and his family. Since then, he'd grown wary of fully committing again. Two and half years of hiding, of half-assed attempts while those people who had created the living dead continued to grow more and more powerful.

How many tries? How many failures?

You have the ability within you. You just have to trust yourself.

He listened to Jeremy give his impassioned speech as he weaved between the walking corpses, trying not to run them down. The man, an old friend from his academia days, was a natural communicator. This role fit him well.

There were two scourges overrunning the island. The first was manmade. The second, inherently natural, yet also unique to mankind: evil. Drew could see evidence of it all around, in the glow of the distant fires and the stink of burning metal and plastic and wood. But it was what couldn't be so easily seen and sensed which terrified him, the raping and robbing, the destruction of humanity in the worst possible way: for sport, for pleasure.

He feared the living, not the dead. He felt no pity for them, the people who willingly and with full cognizance of their choices followed their paths of destruction. It was the infected dead he pitied. They were victims. They hadn't asked for this. He understood the terror they experienced in their final living moments. He pitied them in their death throes. He'd witnessed firsthand the attacks. So often they were by loved ones lost to the disease— parents, children, neighbors.

What would it be like to die at the hands of a child you had given life to? A terrible nightmare bearing the mask of a beloved child.

This was why he had come out of his own hole, when Marion had called, when Jeremy had sent out his plea. He had wanted to save Cassie. He'd finally decided to try what he'd been terrified of in the past.

But then to discover that he was helpless anyway. This other sickness, this ancient virus, against which he had no defense. It was a terrible irony.

He would've given anything to save her, even his own blood.

Several of the infected had formed a knot at the end of the road. They cloistered together, as if in consultation, and turned to contemplate his headlights as he approached. He wondered what traces of their souls remained, if any. He wished he knew. He hoped it was none, though he feared he might be wrong.

He drew close to them, wary as they turned their black, dead eyes toward his window, sensing the presence of someone whole nearby to whom they could spread their disease. And then, not sensing that such a thing existed, they turned away, disinterested.

He turned the wheel and carefully navigated onto the sidewalk, knocking over trashcans and sign posts and fences to get past them.

So many now. So many more yet to come.

Jeremy was right. The island was lost.

He wondered what would become of it. He feared it might be much worse than the vilest thing he could conceive.

Playground for the privileged few.

For some reason, this phrase stuck with him, caused him such distress.

He came to the highway and saw the cars scattered upon it, many abandoned, their doors flung open, headlights piercing the night. A few engines still rumbled. He could hear the squawk of the dying radios, and he imagined the reporters out there, probably safe somewhere on the mainland, calmly hyping whatever falsehoods they'd been spoon-fed, spinning yarns that couldn't hold a candle to the horrible reality. Claims of police exerting control. The military rushing in to help. Violence quickly squelched.

The misinformation he'd been hearing over the past few days deeply saddened him.

 
.
 
.
 
. isolated pockets
 
.
 
.
 
. mostly calm
 
.
 
.
 
. mind-controlling drugs
 
.
 
.
 
.
 
Laroda
 
.
 
.
 
.
 
.

He twisted the radio dial after Jeremy's last words and tried not to think about the people going after his friend. Or how close they might be. He prayed for Jeremy's safety, yet knew it was only a matter of time before he and all the rest of them were captured and killed.

Or worse. Almost certainly worse than murdered.

They would be reinserted, like cogs, into the machine. Like exchangeable pieces in some game.

All in the name of profit.

But as he flipped through the stations, he was surprised to hear not more of the falsehoods, but more and more of the truth. They were, for the first time, reporting about the spread of the new disease which killed and yet somehow didn't.
Could the rumors have been true all this time?
they wondered.
Has the government been dabbling in reanimation?

He felt strangely vindicated by this. The truth was actually starting to win out. People were starting to believe, or at least were beginning to openly believe. And all this despite the efforts of those who wished them not to.

But then he heard a new word being bandied about — neonecrotics — and he winced. “They've already given it a name,” he muttered darkly to himself. It was the first step toward accepting it.

He heard a scream and out of the corner of his eye he saw a flash of white, a woman running, her shirt torn and bloody. He saw the gash on her arm and knew it was already too late for her.

You could save her
, came a whisper from somewhere inside his head.
Like you were planning to save Cassie.

“I don't even know if it'll work,” he answered himself.

You think it might.

Yes, he did. But he'd always been too afraid to try. “What if it only makes it worse?”

What does she have to lose now?

But it was too late for the woman. The injuries were too substantial. She was on the brink of death. And besides, he didn't have the necessary supplies with him.

Get them. For the next one. And the ones after that.

“That's what I'm doing.”

The woman stumbled and was quickly overtaken. First, by a slower, hobbling grandfather whose face dripped red, greasy chunks. His gut bulged from too many feedings. The woman screamed and Drew knew that her death would be quick, though not quick enough. Not
thorough
enough. He wished a pack of them would descend upon her while she still lived. He wished they'd feed so thoroughly that she would not come back. But only one other infected joined the old man.

He heard her screams long after he passed. Even long after she had passed away. They continued to echo off the bones of his skull, and not even the windows shut as tightly as they would go could make them stop.

 

CHAPTER SEVENTY TWO

She hated to see Cassie suffer like this, alternating between moaning in pain and being unconscious, expressing only fear and anger.
Cassie
, she whispered, brushing the dirty hair from her forehead, her own tears washing away the grime which had built up over the past couple of days.
My dead, sweet, precious girl.
And the tears fell for all of them, for the girl who was slipping away before her, for the son she'd lost two months prior, to her husband, who'd left her soon afterward. And for herself, who'd never left that hospital room.
Soon it'll be all over. I promise.

All that was left was the actual doing of it.

But like that day on the side of the road, the tiny furry body in her hands, already broken beyond repair, Lyssa couldn't do it. She couldn't finish the job.

Cassie struggled, her face purple from the exertion, her veins bulging on her neck and forehead. Her jaw strained against the tape, placed there so that the dead would not hear her cries and come to their door hoping to feed.

Soon, my dear. Soon you will be free from all of this.

She stood from her daughter's side, because all that was left was the doing, and the doing needed to be done. Quickly, surely.

She called for the boy. He had in his possession what she needed to finish the job.

 

CHAPTER SEVENTY THREE

He found Marion's car parked askew on the sidewalk in front of the main entrance of the hospital, bathed in the bright lights spilling from the shattered glass doors. Blood stained the concrete and the potted ferns growing alongside. One had been uprooted. Drew stared at it for a moment, wondering why. It was one of those things that just didn't make any sense.

Bloody streaks trailed away on the sidewalk in a half dozen different directions, crisscrossing the vestibule and passing through the confetti of shattered glass. Among them were fragments of clothing, tissue and bone. A dozen of the infected milled about outside, but he could see at least a dozen more in the main lobby. As he pulled up alongside the car, he saw Marion and Ramon seated inside.

He pushed the button to open the passenger side window and gestured for Marion to do the same.

“Take Ramon home,” he instructed. “I'll be close behind with what we need.”

“You can't go in there,” Ramon cried. “Not alone.”

Drew nodded to Marion, who nodded back. “You still got your pistol?” Drew asked. Ramon nodded. “Good. Let me have it. I'll be fine. But I think you two better hurry back.”

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