The Z-Strain Trilogy Box Set [Books 1-3]

Home > Other > The Z-Strain Trilogy Box Set [Books 1-3] > Page 1
The Z-Strain Trilogy Box Set [Books 1-3] Page 1

by Morris, SJ




  The Complete

  Z-Strain

  Trilogy

  Book One: Z-Strain

  Book Two: The Road to Perdition

  Book Three: Fallout

  By SJ Morris

  Copyright © 2020 by Forever Morris Publishing, LLC

  This book is a work of fiction. The name, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and are not to be construed as real in any way. Any resemblance to persons, living or dead, business establishments, or actual events, or organization(s) is entirely coincidental.

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without written permission of the author. Please do not participate in or encourage piracy of copyrighted materials in violation of any author’s rights.

  Third Edition January 2020

  Published by Forever Morris Publishing, LLC

  ForeverMorrisPublishing.com

  ®

  ISBN: 9798601913003

  Thank you for purchasing the Z-Strain Series. I hope you enjoy it and will leave a review. Every single one of them is much appreciated!

  Also, please feel free to email me with any questions, comments or ideas that you would like to see our beloved characters run into next. Email me at [email protected]

  If you enjoy this book, make sure to check out my other titles:

  Before the Outbreak: William DeFranco’s Story

  Before the Outbreak: Jessica Chambers’ Story

  Before the Outbreak: Zhang Wei’s Story

  Richie’s Ghost Squad: Book One - Ghost Cat

  Also, keep an eye out for more of my books to be released soon.

  Follow my Amazon author profile HERE and find me on Social Media, My web page, SJMorrisAuthor.com or my author tab on ForeverMorrisPublishing.com to keep up to date on my upcoming releases and general zombie apocalypse/horror fun.

  Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SJMorrisAuthor/

  Twitter: https://twitter.com/sjauthor

  Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sjmorrisauthor

  YouTube: SJ Morris Author

  Enjoy immersing yourself in the Z-Strain Apocalypse. Happy reading!

  ~SJ Morris

  Dedication

  In the words of Chris Palahniuk, “We all die. The goal isn’t to live forever, the goal is to create something that will.”

  I dedicate this trilogy to all the fans of anything zombie apocalypse. This is for the readers, the film buffs, the gamers, the preppers, and everyone in between.

  ~SJ Morris

  Z-Strain

  Book One of the

  Z-Stain Series

  By SJ Morris

  Copyright © 2018 by Forever Morris Publishing, LLC

  This book is a work of fiction. The name, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and are not to be construed as real in any way. Any resemblance to persons, living or dead, business establishments, or actual events, or organization(s) is entirely coincidental.

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without written permission of the author. Please do not participate in or encourage piracy of copyrighted materials in violation of any author’s rights.

  Third Edition February 2018

  Published by Forever Morris Publishing, LLC

  ForeverMorrisPublishing.com

  ®

  ISBN: 9781980363668

  Chapter 1

  The truck was packed, and we were almost ready to go. My kids and I were going on a weeklong camping trip to our cabin in Pine Lake, New Jersey, just south of the New York border.

  The boys, Lance and Tyler, had been looking forward to this trip since the day I said we were going. My daughter, Allycia, on the other hand, was upset she had to spend time with her family rather than going to the spring formal with her new boyfriend, Jake Carter. She had a crush on him for the last month or so, and he finally asked her out. Now, I was ruining her life, or so she said.

  Being thirteen is not what I remembered it to be. For me, it was school, friends, and sports. For my Allycia, it seemed to be boys, clothes, and more boys.

  Taking care of three teenagers by myself had proven to be difficult, and that was one of the main reasons I wanted to take everyone on this trip. It would get us all out of the house. I hoped that by getting us away from our normal day-to-day lives, that were quickly becoming very separate, it would let the four of us get back to basics.

  I wanted to immerse my family in something we loved to do before my husband passed. We needed something to bring back memories of happier times, of when we were a stable, typical family.

  We used to do this trip every spring when Jack was still alive. The five of us would pack the truck with enough camping gear to live off the land for six months. Even if we were just going for a few days. We’d bring the Johnboat for fishing, the rifles, as well as the bow and arrow, were also packed for target practice and hunting.

  The guns and Jack were going to be the only things missing from this year’s trip. Hunting with the boys was more of Jack’s thing. Don’t get me wrong, I can handle myself with a gun, but I never really enjoyed it, and the kids had never seen me kill anything bigger than a spider.

  If Jack were still alive, I was certain we wouldn’t have missed the last two years of camping.

  Of course, I was also sure that a lot of other things would be different too.

  Jack was an amazing father and husband, the best anyone could ask for. I miss him desperately, and it makes it worse when I see how much the kids miss him. Unfortunately, I’d seen that a lot in the last few days as we got the camping gear together.

  As Lance picked up the bag with the bow and arrow, he had a solemn look. I knew he was remembering either his father teaching him to use it or their first hunting trip together.

  Tyler looked deep in thought as he packed the fishing gear, and he helped Lance get the boat trailer ready to hook up to the truck. They always had so much fun on fishing trips with Jack. They’d come back with some amazing story, like how they caught a fish so big it almost tipped over the boat.

  Allycia just moped around no matter what she was doing recently. I think it was partly because she wouldn’t get to go to the dance with her new boyfriend, but I also felt a lot of it had to do with the obvious fact that she just missed her father.

  Watching her do everyday things made me almost regret setting this trip in motion.

  Even the dog seemed sad as we sat on the front steps waiting for the kids to finally confirm they were all packed and ready to go.

  Lilly, our dog, used to run away all a lot. Well, not so much run away as she felt the need to take herself for a stroll down the block if you left the door open.

  She’s only fifteen pounds, but she’s a Shiba Inu, a Japanese hunting dog. She’s all legs and lean muscle.

  Every time she took off, Jack used to get so mad and bolt full throttle out the front door screaming for her to come back.

  I would tell him to calm down as he ran past me, and I headed to the kitchen for the treat jar. He would be chasing Lilly further down the street, and I would just stand on the sidewalk outside the front of our house and yell her name, so she would look up at me.

  I would hold up the treat jar, give it a little shake and whistle.

  Lilly would shoot right in my direction and run past Jack so fast, he couldn’t grab her. She would run right up to me for her treat. I’d pick her up and take her to the house.
All while, Jack was making his way back down the block with his crooked smile since he knew I’d have her in the house all cuddled up with me on the couch before he could even get in the door.

  These are the things I remember and miss most about him.

  Don’t get me wrong, I still think of the tender moments in bed together and our wedding day, but it’s the everyday stuff I wish I could have back.

  He was a tough man when he needed to be, but he was gentle and loving the rest of the time. Just don’t tell his friends I said that.

  He was a firefighter when he died, and before that, he was in the Marines. That was actually how we met each other. I was a lab rat, or more specifically, a virologist with a company called N-Tech. I studied and categorized viruses when my company was contracted to work with the USAMRIID, The United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases.

  I was twenty-four when they sent me to Atlanta, Georgia, to work a contract with the military. They’d come across a nasty strain of a rabies-like virus that no one had ever seen before. My team was supposed to try to categorize and neutralize the virus, if possible.

  A group of Special Operation Marines were sent somewhere in Africa and had come back with most of the team very sick after some sort of attack or ambush. Jack was one of those soldiers.

  The whole thing was very hush-hush. I had to sign a confidentiality statement that clearly stated I couldn’t tell anyone where I was going, and I couldn’t have any outside contact while I was there. Since everything was kept so quiet, they wanted as small of a team working on it as possible. This just meant that guess who got to do hands-on work with patients instead of just being behind a microscope and computer screen?

  Yep, me.

  Jack was the healthiest of the men that came in, and I saw him first at the request of the Marines.

  Until this time, the men had only received very basic medical attention, provided on the flight into Georgia, since they had no idea what they were dealing with.

  Jack was massively dehydrated and needed a good meal, but for the most part, his strength was the only thing that suffered. Jack Norrington was the first person I had done a full physical workup on since my early days in college, and he certainly didn’t make it easy on me. Me, in my full biohazard suit, and Jack, in his barely-there hospital gown. It was love at first sight.

  We always laughed about me being more than overly covered and him being almost naked the first time we met, but Jack said he didn’t need to see all of me. He only needed to look into my eyes to see that I was the woman he wanted to spend the rest of his life with.

  My first words to him were simple and professional. “Hello, Captain Norrington, I’m Abbigail, and I’ll be doing your physical.”

  His response to me was brazen, romantic, dashing, and timeless in a way that I’d never forget.

  “Nice to meet you, Abbigail. I promise that as soon as they let us leave here, I am taking you to dinner so I can tell you all of the reasons we are perfect for each other.”

  It was the sweetest thing anyone had ever said to me.

  The other patients were a different story, though. I was given a total of three of the ten Marines that were brought in.

  Aside from Captain Norrington, I had Sergeant Leroy Junth, who had some sort of bite wound to the right forearm and a third patient by the name of Lieutenant Gary Jacobson, who was badly scratched across the face.

  At first, they had extremely high blood pressures and elevated heart rates with fevers at, or just above 105-degrees. They seemed to be in constant, agonizing pain. I gave them morphine, but their temperatures were so high they would burn it up before it could do much good.

  When they were lucid enough to speak, which was not very often, they both complained of the feeling like their muscles were on fire, a horrible headache, and that they were incredibly thirsty.

  Again, because of the high temperatures, they were sweating the fluids out faster than I could pump them in. They were semi-alert and talking, but that was only for the first two days, and not much of it made any sense, except about how they felt like they were on fire.

  After the first two days, they both lapsed into a coma. Over the next five days, they didn’t wake up, and their bodies would only spasm periodically, like mini seizures. I chalked it up to the incredibly high fevers they were running. I was amazed they lasted the first few days with their temperatures so high. The intensity of what their bodies were going through was heartbreaking, but I found some solace in the fact they were in a coma for most of it.

  I was expecting them to pass after the first night, but slowly, after the fifth day of the men enduring their comas, their breathing became slower, their blood pressures dropped, and they actually seemed like they might beat whatever this was.

  The seizure activity had also stopped.

  The fever, though, never dipped below 105-degrees, which was extremely unusual since the men seemed to be getting better. However, since their temperature was so high for such a long time, I was sure that these brave men would have some sort of brain damage if they ever woke up at all.

  On day seven, I was given the order to restrain the soldiers. I did as I was told, even though it didn’t seem right to be securing patients who appeared to be coming out of a weeklong coma. That’s certainly not how I would want to wake up.

  On day eight, I was told to get final blood and flesh samples, especially from the wounds my two patients had. The wounds were another oddity since they didn’t appear to be healing. I was also told to release Mr. Jack Norrington to general quarantine since he was not showing the same symptoms as the others. I was then told to take my samples back to the lab for additional research.

  I was no longer permitted to see the two other men, and to this day, I have no idea what happened to them.

  After we were no longer able to come in contact with the infected patients, everyone from my team continued our work on trying to categorize the virus. They all had the same type of experience with the other soldiers in their care as I had with mine.

  Troy, the biggest brain on the team, seemed to think whatever it was, was mostly attacking the brain, due to the constant high fever but the USAMRIID would not allow him to do any scans on any of the patients. They told him the patients were no longer available for testing. Whatever that meant.

  So, we did what work we could with the samples we had. We cross-checked the genetic makeup of the virus against every strain that had ever been categorized, but we found absolutely nothing. Nothing even came close, which was the oddest thing I had and have ever seen in my entire career.

  Typically, something looks like it, and they end up being different mutations of each other, but this was something brand new and highly aggressive.

  Without having any success finding out what the virus was, our team ran tests to try and create an anti-virus, but it was highly resilient and didn’t respond to anything we tried. It would only consume and infect everything we threw at it. It was a mystery, a very dangerous mystery. The cells that were infected appeared to be dead or dormant, but they continued to function, attacking any new live cells immediately after contact.

  The virus itself was fascinating, but when I thought about what it was doing to the soldiers that were previously in our care, men that had families and loved ones, I was reminded of just how ruthless this new virus was.

  Nothing stopped it as far as myself and my team could find, so I was sure this awful thing would just keep destroying the bodies of the soldiers until there was nothing left. I asked about them; said I needed to know in order to draw better conclusions to the tests we were running. I was told they had brought in another team to take care of the soldiers, and their current states would not assist us in locating or finding an anti-virus. I was told my job was to identify and stop the virus, but I never got to do that.

  After a few weeks of testing for cures with no success, we were all told to pack up our personal belongings so we could be sent home. We were no
t to take any equipment, notes, samples, or anything at all from the lab. All of it was the property of the USAMRIID.

  I was instructed that I’d have to sign another confidentiality agreement, which ensured I would never share any information on anything I had witnessed or researched. Even though the team I was working with had never met before this and we were all from different parts of the country, we were not allowed to associate with one another ever again, personally or professionally. If we breached any of these confidentiality agreements, we would be facing charges of treason.

  Treason. That was a reality check.

  After we signed our ‘agreements,’ we began gathering our belongings, but they ended up confiscating everything anyway.

  All of our research, samples, and equipment were promptly taken and locked away, who knows where.

  I remembered being escorted out and walking past where our lab had been. It was nothing but white tiled floors now. There was absolutely nothing left. I walked out with the clothes that I walked in wearing.

  They took all of my other clothes and personal hygiene items, and I never got them back. I was told they were itemized and the ones that were not returned to me, I was going to be reimbursed for.

  I assumed they were destroyed because I never got anything back.

  At the time, this worried me to a higher level than I was expecting. I’d had some weird assignments before, but never like that one.

  If the government was that scared of the virus… it really said something about how dangerous it truly was.

  Jack kept his promise to me, though. When the entire project was scrapped, he was allowed to go home too, and he was waiting for me outside the CDC building.

  As soon as I walked through the doors and my armed escort left me to myself, Jack came right up to me.

  “So, what kind of food are you in the mood for?”

  His smile was so perfect, but I was still a little shaken with my discharge from the military.

 

‹ Prev