ZOMBIES: "Chronicles of the Dead": A Zombie Novel (4 page)

BOOK: ZOMBIES: "Chronicles of the Dead": A Zombie Novel
6.7Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Therefore, the only people that were going to the hospitals were people that had not yet become infected, and were just hoping to get some kind of vaccination, or a pill, or something that would keep them from getting the parasitic virus if they were to come in contact with someone or something that was carrying it.

Live newscasts from some of the medical centers, showed some of the doctors and nurses, had already contracted the disease, and were attacking these people as they entered the facilities.

The Center for Disease Control in Atlanta, had isolated a zoonotic virus found in the feral dog population that they thought was the culprit, and with their numbers having had exploded in the United States in recent years, the disease had spread ridiculously fast. But even the CDC wasn't completely sure.

They put out several possible scenarios. One of which was the Typhoid Mary scenario. This stated that the feral dogs were immune from the disease that they were carrying, and had spread the virus months beforehand. It lay dormant for an undetermined incubation period, and then when something of an unknown nature triggered it, it became active in some people.

That is why initially, such a great number of cases were so prevalent, with some estimates ranging as high as eighty-five percent of the population. It was almost as if someone turned on a light switch, only in this case a
zombie
switch.

Apparently, death was the trigger that activated the dormant virus in people that seemingly, had not yet been affected, and their ultimate demise awakened the quiescent sickness. Whether it was chemical activity in the brain, or lack thereof, death by any means other than forced trauma to the head, meant that you would return to the living, undead, with a voracious appetite for consuming flesh. Therefore, within the short span of several hours, there was total anarchy across the globe.

A "
Zombie Apocalypse
" had begun!

As we somberly walked back into the kitchen again, to focus on how we were going to cope with the predicament that was facing us.

Billy looked puzzled.

"What's that buzzing sound?" he asked.

"It's coming from the kitchen." Jacob said, with the same puzzled look on his face.

The gruesome sight of our former neighbor Jon who we all were expecting, yet dreading to see, had grown even more macabre. During the time we had watched the news unfold in our living room, the smell of the contents of Jon's carved up entrails had attracted a multitude of flies who's constant buzzing had impaired our hearing to the point that we were unable to hear the real danger that awaited us in the next room.

Later as we learned more about the menacing creatures that were roaming our world, we would find that the smell of the rotting flesh of the zombies would usually be the reason that flies were attracted to them, but in this case, Jon had not been a member of the undead long enough for his body to start to putrefy. Therefore, the feces leaking from his ripped and torn intestines was the culprit in this instance.

When we reentered the kitchen, we found that the immense rabble of flies was not the only thing that was hovering over our former neighbor Jon, Julie his wife had made her way to our patio doorway and was making a meal of what was left of Jon's now cadaverous corpse.

Now seeing her, and hearing her over the hideous buzzing of the massive amount of flies, we watched in horror as our new visitor snarled and spit, all the while biting and tearing away the flesh from her now dead husband's bones, partially chewing it, then gulping it down, reminiscent of a wild dog wolfing down its prey.

It was clear Julie too was infected; extremely dangerous, and bound to attack us as soon as she realized we were in her presents.

Without uttering a word, I turned and ran as fast as I could to my bedroom closet, where my gun safe was located.

I thought to myself.

"
Hurry Jack, faster
!"

I fiddled with the safes combination for only a few seconds before I was able to swing the door open, but that few seconds seemed like hours.

My first choice was my Glock 19 which was fully loaded and hanging from a gun hook right in front of me.

Even though many of the experts will tell you to unload your gun and store the ammunition in another area, however, I was taught a long time ago, that if your gun isn't loaded when you need it, you might as well not have it.

Trying to locate your ammunition and load your weapon (probably in the dark) while the bad guys are bearing down on you, is not only illogical, but also unadvisable. That is if you wish to stay alive.

That advice served me well during those first hours of the apocalypse, and still does to this very day. An unloaded gun is just another blunt force object like a club; you might as well be carrying a stick or a rock.

But enough for now on gun safety and tactics.

In a split second, I had a gun in my hand and I was rushing back to the kitchen hoping that Julie was still preoccupied with her husband, and hadn’t noticed my family standing mere feet away.

Returning to the kitchen, I found Jacob and Billy standing in front of Gin, Billy with a kitchen chair held over his head, ready to club Julie senseless, and Jacob with an iron skillet poised to do the same if the diseased man-eater were to bolt in his direction.

Julie had yet to notice any of us standing there, but I knew it was just a matter of time until she did. We all knew that one of us was going to have to put Julie out of her misery before she threatened us, and being the one with the gun, I knew that I was the most likely candidate for the distasteful (no pun intended) yet necessary job.

I stood there for a moment hesitating, watching the repugnant pantomime, waiting for Julie to make a move toward us, so I could justify in my mind, the heinous act that I was about to commit.

"What are you waiting for?" Gin asked anxiously, and in my opinion a bit too loud.

"We can't just kill her! Jon's already dead, so we won't be saving him, and she hasn't done anything to us yet," I said naively, as I reluctantly raised my pistol, not yet fully realizing the scope of the cataclysm before us.

Jacob now repeated the warning the emergency broadcast had reported.

"Don't let them bite you, or scratch you, or get any of their blood in your eyes, nose, or mouth."

"Right! Shoot her, shoot her now!" Gin said.

Again, in my humble and meager opinion, she said it a bit too loud.

Because at that moment Julie looked up, and noticed the four of us standing nearby watching her scarf down her husband.

Gin, seeming less afraid now, yelled.

"She's seen us!"

Julie quickly lost all interest in the
post-marriage
meal before her, and concentrated her full attention on the seemingly fresher live meat in her midst.

She leaned forward putting her left hand on the remains of Jon's right leg, digging her fingers deep into the gashes she herself had caused, and reaching up over Jon's head with her right hand in an attempt to pull herself to her feet; she grabbed the razor sharp edge of the broken glass that had sawed Jon in half.

Julie put most of her weight on the glass with her hand, which was covered with Jon's blood, and between her slippery blood-soaked fingers and the angle of the glass, there was little friction to aid her grip.

Unable to maintain her grasp, her hand quickly broke free and slid down the glass, instantly her fingers were cleanly severed off between her knuckles and the first finger joints, causing her to fall face first into Jon's hollowed out torso where the glass neatly sliced her head from her neck.

Her head fell to the floor leaving a trail of blood behind it as it awkwardly rolled under our kitchen table; her body went limp except for a slight twitching of her fingers (the ones that were still attached) and dropped on top of Jon's half eaten corpse.

Her severed fingers quivered on the floor beside Jon's dead body for a few moments, and then slowly began to exhibit signs of stiffening before they too became lifeless nubs on our kitchen floor.

That is when we knew the true horror of this disease. Although Julie's head was now detached from her body, her head was still alive.

The eyes in Julie's decapitated head rolled back and forth, and up and down as they had when her head was still connected to her body.

Although she still moved her jaw in an attempt to bite us, and I'm sure she would have if an opportunity would have presented itself, she was not able to spit or spew blood or saliva now that her lungs were several feet away, still enclosed in her detached body.

Earlier we had wondered why Jon was still alive after his body had been cut in two. Even when the shard of glass fell and finally put him out of his misery, we didn't make the connection that the diseased brain would have to be destroyed before the infected ones would ultimately find peace.

The official broadcasts had not mentioned anything about how to kill the people that had been infected, the warnings were more generic, like stay inside, lock your doors, don't get bit, that kind of thing.

Gin turned away from Julie’s grossly animated head.

"I think I'm going to puke."

"Me too!" Jacob said, his face turning a little green.

Boom! Boom!

I watched a fist size chunk of the back of Julie's skull careen off one of the kitchen table legs as my Glock 19 sang out, sending its 9mm bullet through Julie's left eyeball and smashing into the interior of her cranium, and finally putting an end to our neighbor's torment, and her furious menacing stare.

The only sounds now were the ringing in our ears from the gunshots, and the sickening buzz of the hundreds of flies in the room, along with the constant crackle of gunfire in the distance.

Our neighbors had now ceased all movement, and for the moment, I felt safe as I slid the pistol into the back of my waistband.

We stood there for a while, pondering what to do next. Gin still had her back to the atrocious scene.

“I’m going to call the police!” she said.

“I tried calling you several times on my way home, but couldn’t get through, everybody is calling 911. But go ahead and try, maybe you’ll get through.” I said, doubtful that she would get any results.

Gin dialed the emergency number again and again to no avail.

"You're right the phone is still useless, I can't get through to the police," Gin said, as she tossed her cell phone onto the kitchen counter just barely missing the sink.

"We can't stay here, it’s not safe," I said.

Billy waved his hands around in front of his face, as he shooed away the flies.

"Well I'm not going to stay here with all these flies," he exclaimed!

"The cops aren't coming, the ambulance isn't coming, nobody is coming, I think we're on our own," Jacob scowled.

"He's probably right, after what I saw on my way home, what the television said, and now this, there might not even be a police force now, or army, or anything," I said, as I shooed away some flies that were now tormenting me as well.

Gin leaned toward me, her face now beginning to turn the same shade of green that Jacob's had earlier and muttered.

"This is disgusting, how are we going to clean up this mess?"

I tried not to think of just how disgusting what we had to do was really going to be, and I said.

"I've got an idea. You boys go get the snow shovels, and that old paint drop cloth that’s out in the garage. Hurry up! Bring some duct tape too!"

"And some insect spray if you can find any," Gin added loudly.

When the boys returned with the paraphernalia I'd sent them to retrieve, we began to shovel our repugnant former neighbors piles of guts and dismembered body parts, along with Julie's severed head outside onto the patio.

We didn't get very far before hearing the heaving sound of Gin vomiting from the sight of the disjointed corpses and the smell of fecal matter from Jon's shredded bowls.

The odor had already permeated the room, and was spreading quickly throughout the rest of the house. Now with the vomit added to the mix, the reeking stench in the room was almost too much for any of us to bear.

Jacob's tint was greener still, as he covered his mouth.

"I think I'm going to throw up too," he complained.

"Try to hold it down," I said. "Leave the room if you have too."

Jacob turned his head away from the pile of intestines he was pushing out the door and dropped his shovel to the floor.

"I'm going to the garage, it doesn't smell out there," he said before covering his mouth with his hand once more.

"Go with him honey, you don't look so good either," I said to Gin, hoping Billy could tolerate the smell long enough to help me finish the distasteful (again, no pun intended) job at hand.

"How are you doing Billy? Are you going to make it?" I asked.

Looking up at me with a scowl on his face, he answered.

"I'm okay, but let's hurry, this really stinks."

Trying not to slop blood on each other, or ourselves, we worked as swiftly as we could, shoving the almost unrecognizable human remains out the doorway, which had the effect of drawing most of the flies outside with them.

Other books

Inside the CIA by Kessler, Ronald
Hopeless by Cheryl Douglas
Hot Monogamy by St. Vincent, Lucy
Catherine Coulter by The Valcourt Heiress
Healer's Touch by Kirsten Saell
Fire Always Burns by Krista Lakes
Red Templar by Paul Christopher
King City by Lee Goldberg