NECROPOLIS NOW
ZOMBIE ASCENSION: Book One
Vincenzo Bilof
Introduction
Hello my name is Mark Tufo and I love zombies! There I said it, I feel much better now. I love slow ones, I love fast ones, ones with rage viruses and ones with T viruses, doesn’t much matter to me. We are truly a niche lover you and I dear reader. We are looked down upon by the rest of the horror community. I have a sister-in-law that thinks I’m damn near certifiable for writing zombie stories. She says ‘why zombies?’ I say ‘Why not?’
I have been in love with the genre since I was 7 years old and my cousin who was babysitting thought that watching the Night of the Living Dead would be a great way to while away the time. I’d never been more terrified and enthralled at the same time in my entire life. From that point on I was hooked. Those arms crashing through the hastily built defenses are etched in my mind. So I’ve had time over the past few years to kind of think what is it with our shared fascination for this genre and I truly think it comes down to the scope and the breadth of a zombie apocalypse.
We’ve all seen movies or read books with werewolves, vampires, monsters of any sort or even a sasquatch or two. But they always take place in some remote town in some remote part of the country or the world. They are a very localized disaster. Now I’m sure for the locals of those communities it’s horrible but for the rest of us we’ll still be playing our wii’s or xbox360’s. Life goes on. But not so in a zombapoc, life comes to a crashing halt. They are everywhere and nowhere is safe. Life becomes a constant struggle just to survive.
The zombie culture has waxed and waned over the years, obviously the last couple of years have been huge. The Walking Dead bringing us frenetic fans to the forefront. There’s hardly a set of commercials on anymore that doesn’t have a zombie on it. Which leads me to believe there’s more of us out there than we think. I’ve had more than a few readers of mine confide that they love zombie stories but they don’t tell their co-workers or family for fear of being ridiculed. My personal philosophy was if my family, friends or co-workers didn’t like it they could go **ck themselves but I have the manners of a goat, so we’ll leave it at that.
The rise of the e-reader and the ability to self-publish has propelled a genre that has been largely ignored by the giants of the horror world. Stephen King’s Cell may loosely be based on zombies, Dean Koontz hasn’t touched them. And if not for the small to medium sized pioneering publishers like Severed Press we still may not have got our fix. I’ve read more than my fair share of books that leads me to believe that just because you can self-pub doesn’t necessarily mean you should. Some of these books have been poorly written and poorly edited which can be a detractor to the quality products that Severed puts out which leads me to the reason for my intro.
I have just yesterday finished reading a copy of newly published author Vincenzo Bilof and his book entitled Necropolis Now: Zombie Ascension and in a word or a few dozen (some say I’m long winded). I loved it. The purpose of this intro isn’t to give spoilers. But I will tell you this, the story did what a good story should, it pulled me in, shook me around a bit and wouldn’t let me go. There were times I was horrified, scared, concerned for certain characters and hoping for the untimely demise of others. He starts off fast and keeps picking up the pace as he charges full barrel to his conclusion. There is a large cast of characters that I cared for as he gave them depth and personality, a quality I can assure you is not easy to pull off. I cared for what happened to these individuals but like any apocalypse some just aren’t going to make it and that adds to the realism of the book.
Be prepared dear reader to jump down the rabbit’s hole with Vincenzo who has delivered a power packed novel chock full of surprises and twists that will keep you guessing. Every time I thought I had a bead on what he was doing he switched it up. It was awesome to take a break from work and immerse myself in Vincenzo’s world for a couple of days. And shouldn’t that be what we pick up a book for in the first place? A chance to walk in a different world, to escape, to enjoy, to be scared **itless, and basically to just have fun. I lost a fair amount of sleep over the last couple of nights reading this story maybe it should have come with a disclaimer: ‘Warning book may cause sleeplessness and night tremors!’
This is difficult, there are so many examples, and plot pieces I want to share here, so many unique things I read that I would love to ‘talk’ with you about. But that’s not fair to you, how many times have we sat in a movie theater with that one friend that smacks you in the arm ‘Oh you’re going to love this part!’ And if you’re like me you might want to strangle them a little bit or maybe just a small back hand, I mean just enough to shut them up. So I don’t want to be that guy. I think Vincenzo has a long and fruitful career in front of him. I thoroughly enjoyed his novel and I am honored that Severed Press thought enough of me to be entrusted with an introduction to his story. Vincenzo, my hat’s off to you. I hope one day we can sit and discuss zombies over an ice cold beer, I wish you nothing but success.
Thank you for taking the time to read this, now hurry up and get on to the good stuff!!!
Mark Tufo
is the bestselling author of the Zombie Fallout series.
Prologue: Three Years Ago
It always seemed to be raining whenever Bob returned to the States from Afghanistan. The rain pounded on the bar's roof and wicked thunder rattled the dusty window. There didn't seem to be enough beer to drown out his latest near-death experience; he could still hear the gunfire and the war cries of his two best soldiers, who nearly earned themselves vainglorious deaths.
The bartender was kind enough to place another beer in front of him before he could ask. The handful of patrons who sat disconsolately apart from each other drank grudgingly and watched the evening news on the old television set above the bar. The joint was almost as old as Bob was, and that was damn remarkable.
Afghanistan. Miles and Vega, those two shitheads, nearly got themselves shot to pieces for being damn stupid. Would have served them right, even if they were the best mercenaries Bob could find. If he lost them, it would be more difficult to put together a crew that could take on the higher-paying grunt jobs out there in the desert. More than once, he thought about asking them to help him find Traverse, the bounty job that never seemed to end. He gave up on the job a year ago. His sex-fiend partner, Nick Crater, never stopped hunting the bastard across the country.
Now, he waited for Crater, because they apparently had a break in the manhunt.
Bob impatiently checked his phone. It was like Crater to keep him waiting, but Bob had shown up early to get a head start on his drinking. He had lost a bit of weight out in the desert, so he had some room in his waistline to spare.
When Crater finally showed up, Bob was immediately annoyed. It had been a few months since last he saw the slender, paranoiac soldier with the perfectly shaved head, but he could tell Crater was in one of his moods; he kept looking over his shoulder and surveyed the entire place a little too obviously, a sign that he was ready for a fight.
Crater slapped him on the back, "Nice tan, old man! Did your beard get a little longer?"
Bob ignored the stupid comment. Crater slapped his hand on the bar and demanded a beer from the bartender. "Hope you're not drunk yet, Bob. We're going to have a whole lot of celebrating once tonight's over. I found him."
"Heard that before," Bob didn't look up from his beer.
"You quit on me, and I brought you back in because I figured you could use the payday. I could do this myself, you know. Traverse won't know what hit him."
Bob shook his head. He was done chasing ghosts. Jim Traverse had proven to be the white whale of wanted men. He was a former Delta Force operative turned rogue, and people at the Pentagon were willing to pay a pretty penny to whoever could bring him in alive. There were several teams scouring the earth for Traverse, but nobody came close. Bob had wasted enough of his time. He was picking up more and more contract jobs out in the desert; with Miles and Vega on his team, it was getting easier to collect big paydays, as long as those idiots didn't get themselves killed.
"Don’t need the money," Bob said. "Neither do you. Black Ops has paid you well. Why don't you retire?"
"Why don't you?"
Bob sipped his beer.
Crater was insistent, "Look, we can bring this guy in. He's here, in Detroit. That's why I wanted you to meet me here. I don't know what the hell he's doing, but he's making himself obvious. He's hiding in plain sight out in the suburbs."
"You don't even ask me how it went in Afghanistan? Where's your manners?"
Crater laughed. "Pardon me, your highness. How'd it go? You bang any hairy Arabic women? That's your favorite flavor, isn't it? What about these new people you got on your crew… I heard about that woman. She's a bit trigger happy, ain't she?"
He knew what Crater was after. Vega was a pretty enough girl, and Crater was a depraved man with little interest in social conventions. When they had gone on missions together in the desert, during Operation Desert Storm in the 90s, Crater made it known that he didn't believe in the rules of engagement. He called innocent women, the 'spoils of war.'
"Everyone knows about Vega," Crater continued. "Why don’t you at least introduce us?"
Bob sighed. "Why don't you find some other rock to crawl under? I got something important to do."
"Something important? You're sitting on your ass!"
"Like I said."
Crater downed his beer and wiped his mouth with the back of his hand. "I already called in the cavalry. We've confirmed his position, and I have choppers on standby. This is it, old buddy."
Bob grabbed a fistful of beer nuts and shoved them into his mouth. "Whatever you say. Have yourself a good time."
Crater wasn't going to take no for an answer. "You can have yourself a heart attack after we bag Traverse. Why would you quit now? We’ve got him dead to rights."
"You forget who he is?" Bob asked him. "A hand-to-hand specialist. The guy would scare the shit out of Chuck Norris. Can't be killed."
"I've read the fucking dossier a thousand times. Got it memorized. He flipped after a mission in Egypt, threatened the Pentagon in his report, and went AWOL. He's wanted alive, Bob. Look, pay your bill and let's go. I got our gear in the trunk. We do it now."
Bob really didn't have anything better to do, and he had a few beers in him. If he caught Traverse, it would wipe the bad taste out of his mouth from the whole Afghanistan fiasco. What else did have to do until the next job came along? He thought about visiting his son, but years had passed, and he always had these thoughts. It was something he would inevitably put off, and he knew it. The money he had was going to be spent right here in Detroit on booze and strippers until the next contract came in. He knew it, and Crater knew it, too. Like any other merc, he owned nothing, not even a Social Security number. The only thing he could look forward to was another mission.
He had done everything in his power to erase Traverse from his mind. The former commando devolved into a depraved killer after coming back from Egypt, and he left a trail of mutilated bodies wherever he went. Traverse killed without any discernible pattern, and he killed at will; women, children, men, the elderly, the young. Bob always thought the man was the perfect example of a soldier who was supposed to have died on the battlefield, and sought his violence in the homes of innocents.
A man like that was a menace to society.
"I gotta take a piss," Bob said. "Wait in the car."
***
Bob didn't hate rain. No matter what the mission was, it had to be completed despite whatever elements might interfere. He had operated in sweat-sapping desert heat and in sub-zero frigidity; the weather could always be worse than what it was.
He hated listening to Crater blabber on about all the girls they had met in Brazil years ago when they thought Traverse had fled to South America. They had been wrong, of course, but as Crater reminisced about their prolonged hunt of the man who refused to be found, Bob wondered how he would feel after they finally caught their target. He had dedicated seven years to Traverse's trail, and now, in the middle of a thunderstorm, it was going to be over once and for all. At last.
The only thing Bob truly hated was an incomplete mission, and the Traverse episode always bothered him. Why had the man gone AWOL? Parts of the report were incomplete: Bob didn't know what Traverse discovered in Egypt, nor was he aware what the original mission was. Just as mysterious, were the words the legendary commando had shared with the Pentagon after he came back. Ultimately, it didn't matter, but it troubled Bob only because he always believed a soldier escaped from the travails of battle by seeking another mission. War was the only escape from war.
Crater wouldn't shut up. The rain made it difficult to see the road ahead and the brief flashes of lightning revealed standing water on the overpasses. It was one hell of a storm.
They weren't going to bring in any outside help because they had seen it fail before. Traverse had slipped right through their fingers as soon as the police showed up. This time, they were going to go in quietly, as they were supposed to. It was a clandestine operation, one that required both professionalism and patience. They would confirm the target and attempt to neutralize him while additional support rolled in.
The entire neighborhood had already been scouted, and they were going to move in through the yard behind the house where Traverse was staying. Crater had paid off the family to stay the night somewhere else after he interviewed them and carefully did some recon of his own. Of course, Crater pulled in money from some suit-wearing monkey to take care of the family.
They pulled up on a suburban street in Detroit, one of the few where the lawns were still mowed and the people paid their bills. It was an old neighborhood close to the Grosse Pointe border. Tree branches hung low over the narrow street, and all the homes had been built close together, their driveways barely wide enough for one car.
They got out, quietly opened the trunk, and suited up in the rain. Bob assumed they were parked at least a block away from where Traverse was located; Crater was a professional. They slipped their night gear on, which included black tights, night-vision goggles, light Kevlar, Berettas, and combat knives.
Crater dialed in the air support to evac their target as soon as they could confirm the target's position. Crater and Bob were never supposed to be able to bring Traverse in on their own: an entire team of commandos was needed, but first, the target had to be located, and he had to be inert.
"Showtime," Crater announced.
Bob didn't ask about their plan; he was getting careless, and he allowed Crater to take the lead. He trusted him because he'd been dragged off his bar stool in the middle of a binge to apprehend the man they had both been chasing for far too long.
Crater eagerly led him across the street through puddles of rainwater. The mission was truly on, and Bob realized that he might actually capture Traverse. Finally, after all this time, the hunt was coming to an end.
An unexpected excitement bloomed within his chest as they walked through a darkened yard. For once in his life, he believed that something good was going to happen to him.
Lightning crashed through the night, and both men stopped in their tracks. They crept through the yard in their gear and spied the house where Traverse might have been waiting for them. Bob could feel his heart slow and his muscles tense up. The house was completely dark. How could he let them get the drop on him now, after all this time? It wasn't right. No. Traverse was waiting. He knew…
Bob turned around sharply and found that Crater was twisted backward, his hands clasped around his foe's arm. Traverse held Crater's own knife at his throat.
"Hey there, Bob," the former commando said casually. "Why don't you boys come in and have a beer? The police will be here soon. I figured maybe we can sit down and have a little chat before they arrest me."
"Arrest you?" Bob kept his Beretta trained on the shadowed man.
"It will be much easier to explain if you just come in," Traverse said. "I was waiting for you, Bob. This is all part of the game, I assure you. Drop your false sense of bravado—you can’t win. It would be best if you killed me outright, but you won't, because that's not in the contract. It's a rather old contract though, isn't it?"
"I'm a merc," Bob said. "I'll pick up another job."
"Sure. But the people who employed you to bring me in will be disappointed. They will have you and your friend erased. You know this. I'm far more important to them alive."
"You're fucked," Crater choked. "We got you this time. Got the whole block on lockdown."
Traverse chuckled. "I'm counting on it."
Bob didn't like the feeling of helplessness. He was a man of action, and Traverse had him dead to rights. More than anything, he wanted to take a good look at the ex-soldier's face. He wanted to see the man who had eluded him for so long, so easily.
"Your beer better be cold," Bob grumbled.
"I'm glad you see things my way," Traverse said through the rain. "Go on inside. This house will suit us, I think."
"You don't live here," Bob stated the obvious, because he was afraid of the truth.
"Don't be an idiot," Traverse replied. "Of course, I've been staying in the other house. But I thought it would be rather fun to throw a party tonight. You can keep your weapon, by the way."
Bob cringed. He knew what was coming next. Traverse wasn’t going to kill him, or he would have done it already. If he didn't do anything stupid, Traverse was going to let him live, because it had something to do with whatever game he was trying to play. Traverse was a firm believer in method..
He walked into the dark house in front of Crater and Traverse, though he kept the gun in his hand. The job had been compromised, but he would be damned if Traverse was just going to waste him without a fight.
"Turn on the lights," Traverse said. "I want you to see the surprise."
Strips of human flesh were stapled into the gore-painted wall above the couch. Various organs, shining wetly, were laid out in a macabre collection on the bloody coffee table. The family of four skeletons sat on the couch, their bodies completely skinned, their faces expertly posed to face the television across the living room.