Deadrise 2: Deadwar

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Deadrise 2: Deadwar Page 1

by Steven R. Gardner




  This one is for Aunt Mary…This whole zombie thing and I? It’s your fault…

  ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  Even though mine is the only name on the book, a lot of people contributed in many ways. Trev Poulson (they say never judge a book by its cover but an AWESOME cover sure helps). Sergeant Nate Johnson for educating me on military structure and organization. Cynicalbit, (I don’t need permission if I don’t use your real name haha!) you helped with this one far more than you could ever know. Everyone who purchased DEADRISE and everyone who took the time to review it; there’s no such thing as a bad review, only instructive ones. Lola, Ty, Ali & Charlie (R.I.P.) Don, Jeff, Kevin, Stump and the rest of the guys of the triple B; if there’s a better bunch of men I’ve yet to meet them.

  And in keeping with tradition and saving the best for last, my daughter Autumn for letting me know when it’s time to unplug and my beautiful wife Jill for just being you. I couldn’t do it with out either one of you. I truly am the most blessed man in the world. I love you both very much…

  DEADRISE 2

  DEADWAR

  By Steven R. Gardner

  Copyright © 2011 Steven R. Gardner

  Kindle Edition

  All Rights Reserved

  www.stevenrgardner.com

  www.stevenrgardner.blogspot.com

  On Twitter @pugzombie

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Cover Art © 2011 Trev Poulson

  This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author…

  As a dog returneth to his vomit, so a fool returneth to his folly…

  Proverbs 26:11

  CHAPTER 1

  Sunday, July 1, 2001

  Rainbow Lake, UT

  12:36 PM

  Mordecai Necrotura’s estate was as well stocked with weapons, ammunition, and supplies as Zack said it would be.

  Several tons of dried and canned food, hundreds of fifty-five gallon barrels of clean water, plus enough AK-47’s, ammunition and explosives to supply a small army. As a bonus it contained a small yet ultra-modern hospital wing complete with surgery, x-ray and labs.

  But true to form, despite the estates bounties, there was ample evidence of the depravities as well. Torture chambers with racks and irons, hooks and barbs on the wall and row after row of the most horrible pain infliction devices imaginable.

  There was also the row of crucifixes still attached to the roof. All of the corpses had been cleared from the house and pulled down from the crucifixes. Most likely Zack’s handiwork during the three days he had stayed here.

  It would take them the entire day and well into the night to catalog and inventory the estate. In the process they found several secret passages and rooms, most of which were stocked with more supplies…

  While the others explored the estate, Jenkins, Commander King and Corporal Philips drove a Humvee down the canyon to the town of Kittewa. Before the deadrise Kittewa had been a sleepy little town of corn and dairy farmers, or so it had appeared. In truth many of the townsfolk had secretly belonged to Mordecai’s Death Cult The New Humanity, while the rest had been sacrificed and crucified in his name.

  The town was devoid of zombies… Mordecai and the Krylok had summoned all of them up to his estate to assault the Main House.

  Kittewa was empty…or so they thought.

  It was on the second pass, headed east down Main Street that Commander King spotted movement up one of the residential side streets. He was standing in the hatch, scanning about. He knew he was exposed to sniper fire from an Alpha, but he didn’t care. A blurred flash as someone, or something dashed across the street into one of the yards.

  “Did you see that?” Philips exclaimed from the driver seat.

  “Your damn right I did.” King gripped the handle of the mounted .50 caliber machine gun and instructed Philips to turn down that road.

  “What did you see?” Jenkins asked.

  “I couldn’t make it out. It was fast, too fast for a zombie. And it looked like it was wearing white.”

  “Maybe it was an Alpha?” Philips said. He had only caught a flash of movement from the corner of his eye.

  “Maybe…” King sounded unsure.

  “One of Mordecai’s white robed fanatics?” Jenkins asked. But before he could ask another question a white sheet tied to one end of a large piece of PVC pipe jutted around the corner of the nearest house, waving back and forth. Philips brought the Hummer to a halt and Commander King aimed the .50 cal right at the edge of the house.

  “I don’t like it! It smells like a trap!” Philips said.

  “Relax. Let them make the first move.” Jenkins cautioned.

  “SHOW YOURSELF!” Commander King called from above. The flag dropped to the ground and out stepped a group of people.

  Live human beings! Five in all, clad head to toe in hunters fatigues, their faces covered by scarves and ski masks, with deer rifles slung across their shoulders and sidearm clipped to webgear. Their hands were in the air and their meek body language suggested exhaustion and surrender.

  “Don’t shoot! Please?” one of the camouflaged figures called with a deep, masculine voice. He was big in the chest and wide in the girth.

  “Show your faces!” King barked. The group of people complied, removing the bandannas and revealing three men and two women.

  “Who are you?” Commander King asked.

  “We’re residents of Kittewa.” The man replied nervously.

  “Kittewa was cleaned out by Mordecai Necrotura. Are you servants of his?”

  “NO!” several of them cried out in unison, their voices quivering with fear.

  “He was the DEVIL INCARNATE!” one of them screamed.

  “Mordecai Necrotura is gone from here. His army of the dead has been crushed and driven back to hell.”

  “We know.” Said the deep voiced man.

  “How?” Commander King asked suspiciously.

  “Members of our group witnessed the battle from one of the ridges overlooking Rainbow Lake.”

  “You witnessed the battle?” King was surprised.

  “Yes.”

  “How many are there in your group?”

  “Forty-two men, women and children.”

  “Did you ever consider helping fight?” Commander King couldn’t hide his irritation.

  “Briefly, but the idea was quickly discarded. We are a small group of survivors. We are not soldiers or raiders; we are farmers and ranchers. Had we joined in the battle we would have been slaughtered and our families unprotected. It wasn’t really a choice at all.”

  King gave the man a nod of grudging respect. If the roles were reversed King would have made the same choice. “Why didn’t you contact us when we first arrived at the lake?”

  “At first, we believed you to be allies of Necrotura’s. When the dead first started to walk, Mordecai and his white robed murderers came through town, insisting he was the savior and demanding that we all follow him to salvation. He’d successfully brainwashed several of the townspeople over the years and they followed him blindly. Those that would not kneel and call him savior were tortured publicly, and made to confess their sins, before being crucified. Some were fed to the zombies.”

  “How did your group survive?”

  “We headed up into the back country as soon as the dead began to walk. We knew Mordecai’s fanatic
s wouldn’t be able to find us, and the terrain was too rugged for any zombies to reach us. But we kept sending scouts down to watch what was happening at the lake. Once his army of Hellspawn was defeated, we decided to come to town. We only came down yesterday, and only the five of us. We were checking it out; making sure it was safe for the rest of us to come down out of the mountains.”

  “We were going to contact you.” Another woman said.

  “That’s true.” The man said. “Once we saw that you destroyed Mordecai’s army we knew it was time to contact you…”

  Despite his skepticism, Commander King felt these people were telling the truth. Their camouflage fatigues were sportsman issue, not military, and their weapons were mostly lever action deer and elk rifles. King crouched in the hatch until only his head was poking out. “What do you think?” he asked Jenkins quietly.

  “I think they’re telling the truth.”

  “Me too.” Philips added.

  King nodded his agreement. He stood back up and addressed the man. “What’s your name?”

  “Sheriff Ross Busley.”

  “Sheriff of Kittewa?”

  “That’s right. And the surrounding county.” The man nodded in agreement.

  “Well Sheriff, contact your people. Gather what you need from the town, but do not stay here. It’s not safe. We’ll be securing it over the next few weeks, but until that time you are welcome to join us at the lake.

  While Commander King continued his parlay with the townspeople Jenkins put in the call to the Main House. Sgt. Turner was manning the radio and was pleasantly surprised with word of survivors, and excited about their arrival at the lake. To his annoyance, Jenkins found himself sharing Turner’s sentiments. The losses they had suffered, the destruction of Park City, and the shocking revelations of alien invasion had combined to create a heavy, depressed mood across the group. The arrival of new survivors, new companions, would do wonders for all of their spirits.

  “They’ve been up in the backwoods since this all started, so they are going to be dirty and smelly. They are also going to be hungry. Best start making preparations for their arrival now.”

  And so they did. By nightfall all forty-two men women and children had arrived. Besides the Sheriff, the town doctor was also among their ranks. The refugees brought with them five RV mobile homes, three 4x4 pickups towing horse trailers, half a dozen horses, two dairy cattle, 3 large pigs, a goat, a clutch of chickens and nearly a dozen dogs. And they were dirty, and smelly, and hungry, and most of them had that shell-shocked look of having seen far too many horrors in too short a period.

  The Kittewa town survivors were not the last band of refugees to flock to the lake. Just two days after taking in the townsfolk, survivors from Park City trickled in; three here, half a dozen there. Nearly fifty more had drifted in the past forty-eight hours, including a squad of the Park City military driving a Humvee. Jenkins and PFC Jimenez recognized two of them from the firefight in the Park City Military HQ. All of the survivors brought tales of horror and heroism, of loved ones lost, and new ones made. The Main House was quickly out of living space, so they made plans to expand into the estates along the shore of the lake…

  CHAPTER 2

  Thursday, July 5, 2001

  Rainbow Lake, UT

  9:43 AM

  Doctor Jules Reilly was a short, round-faced old man with thinning white hair and a thick white mustache. A pair of polished bifocals sat across the bridge of his nose, covering red rimmed, watery blue eyes. His face was warm and sincere and his hands cool and soft. He had gently yet firmly insisted on settling in Mordecai’s estate, so he could have easy access to the hospital facilities in the basement. The medic Norris relocated there as well, as did a dozen other refugees.

  Doctor Reilly also insisted that every single person at Rainbow Lake come in for a full physical examination and vitamin booster shots, and he and Norris had been at it almost non-stop since yesterday. There were various cuts and bruises and sprains among the band of refugees, now numbering at one hundred and six, and left untreated, it was an invitation for a host of other, more serious complications. Each of them also brought a complicated medical history with them; heart disease, diabetes, epilepsy, depression, acid reflux disease, addiction, and alcoholism. Amazingly, of all the refugee’s taken in, the only one seriously ill was the one sitting before him now; a young man, no more than twenty-five, his face jaundiced and his eyes bloodshot, his skin clammy and cool to the touch. He wore an open-backed patient’s gown.

  “I feel like I have the flu.” The man moaned, his head swaying as if he might fall over on the table at any moment.

  “Easy son, easy.” The Doctor said, gently laying him down on the examination table. He wore latex gloves, but the mans skin still was cool and clammy to the touch. The man closed his eyes and appeared to fall asleep and the Doctor began his examination. Almost immediately he found an inch long scratch mark along the back of the neck, swollen red and oozing pus. He leaned closer and took a whiff of the putrefaction. As he probed the wound the man writhed about and moaned in pain.

  “I’m sorry son.” And he truly was. He’d seen this kind of wound before and knew what it meant. The man was infected with the plague. He took another whiff of the wound. The twinge the scent of the infection carried made it certain. A zombie had scratched him on the neck and the active plague virus had spread through his body, dooming him.

  The Doctor had encountered his first zombie in his clinic. A local Kittewa man had died of a heart attack right in his office and reanimated ten minutes later, biting a nurse on the arm and breast. Luckily one of the Kittewa Deputy’s, a gangly, pimply-faced college kid named Martin Porter, had been in the office for the annual physical and had managed to kill the zombie with a single shot to the head, but not before putting five shells into its chest. The bitten nurse became infected, of course, and her condition deteriorated over the course of forty-eight hours until she too died and reanimated after only five minutes. She had been bitten while the first zombie had died of natural causes. Doctor Reilly had surmised that a person infected by a bite or scratch would reanimate much quicker than someone who died of natural causes.

  He finished his examination of the patient. With the zombie infection identified, there was no point in checking for anything further. He pulled the latex gloves from his hand and dropped them into the waste receptacle, and began writing his diagnosis in the patients file. Based upon his skin color and his vital signs, Dr. Reilly surmised that the man still had another twenty-four hours before the plague claimed his life…barring unseen complications. But the man wouldn’t live that long. The Doctor knew what needed to be done. Euthanasia…It was the only decent, humane thing to do. And then he would record the minutes passed until reanimation. Science and Morality would both be served.

  “Is it the flu Doc?” The man asked through chattering teeth.

  “I’m pretty sure that’s the culprit. There’s not much I can do except give you something to help you sleep.” But how long until you awaken? Doc Reilly almost laughed at the thought but restrained himself for the patient’s sake.

  “Anything’s better than nothing.” The man tried to chuckle, but winced with pain at the effort.

  Even reanimation as a zombie? “Yes it is. I’ll be right back with a syringe of Valium.” Dr. Riley wondered if Norris had ever had to perform a mercy killing? If not, now was the perfect time for him to become accustomed to the practice. Perhaps he would also be interested in the reanimation experiment?

  He tucked his pen in his pocket, folded the clipboard under his arm and left the examination room to prepare the death needle and find Norris…

  CHAPTER 3

  Monday, July 9, 2001

  Rainbow Lake, UT

  7:03 AM

  From the first day they arrived Jenkins had taken their security upon his shoulders and the burden had caused him to lose many nights sleep…like now. He lay in his bed, his gut a writhing ball of acidic bile and his mind
twisting and turning every which way, as he sought to see every angle of potential weakness.

  Counting Mac and himself there were twenty men with real military experience and another twelve volunteers for the militia. Despite his distaste for the military command structure, his time as a ranger had taught him it was a sound one and Jenkins had saw no point in abandoning it for the Militia, something he found bitterly ironic.

  Perhaps it was a jab at the deceased General Parker, but Jenkins sarcastically promoted himself to General and handed down promotions to those that had survived the fall of Park City and the siege of Rainbow Lake like Caesar himself as well as assigning rank to the newest members of the Militia.

  Mac had been against the idea.

  “General? You’ve got less than fifty men under your command. That barely calls for a Sergeant, doesn’t it?” Mac chided.

  “I was promoted to Colonel in Park City.”

  “Brevet Colonel…” Both of them broke into a laugh.

  “Fuck it! What does it matter? We’re starting this thing from scratch. Besides, I like the sound of General Blake Jenkins.”

  “I don’t know…” Mac shook his head, open skepticism in his face.

  “Who is going to say anything? Most people have already begun to fall into line.”

  “Fall into line?”

  “Most of them are sheep; lost and scared and waiting for someone to tell them what to do. I saw the same thing down at Douglas and the U. I know you saw it too.”

  Mac couldn’t argue that one. Hell, he had been one of them; another soldier manning his post, waiting for someone to tell him what to do. His silence was all the confirmation Jenkins needed.

  “It was the same in Park City. Once Parker and Sheen were dead, I simply asserted my authority, with Major Farrell backing my play of course. And everyone just fell into line.”

  “So you’re just going to assert your authority, huh?”

  “Your damn right I am. And I would like your support… Colonel McReedy.”

  They met each other’s eyes, long and hard before both of them broke into a laugh…

 

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