“I wish,” replied Scott gravely, and hit mute on the TV remote, cutting off a stuttering Fox Rusher. “No, that’s the GNN satellite feed. Please take a seat and watch this with me for a minute, Captain. If this is half as bad as it looks, we’re going to have some very serious decisions to make soon and we need to have as much information as we can get.”
The scene from Times Square pulled back to reveal increasing mayhem. Taxis, trucks and buses plowed through the panicked crowds in a seemingly blind attempt to escape the madness. Victims and attackers alike were crushed into road kill. Mercifully, traffic was soon jammed and ground to a halt. Bodies littered the streets and sidewalks. Endless streams of people continued to pour into the square from every direction. It was impossible to tell which were trying to escape and which were attacking until one pounced upon another. Then the camera returned to the spot where the policeman had been overrun by the berserk cannibal. Amazingly, the assailant who had been shot was walking away, but the cop was lying in a pool of blood, apparently dead. Then, as the camera operator was starting to pan away again, the body of the policeman shook violently and he hopped to his feet. Shaking his head once in confusion, with flaps of bloody skin swinging from his neck, the cop turned and lashed out at a passing civilian. Grabbing a fist full of the woman’s hair, he yanked her towards him and bent his head to her neck. The pixilation could not hide the horror of that moment.
“Damn!” said Scott as he watched the carnage unfold. “That’s what I was afraid of. He just turned into one of them!”
“One of what?” asked Fisher in a stunned tone.
“I’m not sure exactly what to call them yet, Jordie,” responded Scott, “but for want of a better term, ‘zombies’ will do for now.”
“Zombies? Get real, Scott! I know you like those Dawn of the Dead movies, but zombies aren’t real.”
“Perhaps, Captain. I would have agreed with you a hundred percent yesterday. But what other explanation would you offer when you wake up to this shit?”
“Hmmm. Well, what is the news saying about it?”
“Not much, yet. Nobody seems to have any answers. But that’s part of the reason I want you to watch this with me. This may be more important than we can imagine,” said Scott as the image of Fox Rusher replaced the carnage in Times Square. “The laws of nature just changed and we may need to learn the new ones fast if we want to survive.” With another grimace Scott restored the volume.
“…inexplicable rioting and unprecedented acts of violence! Similar footage and reports are coming in from France, Britain, Germany, Italy, as well as many locations in Asia, Latin America and across the United States. Emails, texts, and tweets are painting a picture of worldwide pandemonium. As best as we can tell at the moment, this is a global pandemic of violence.”
The images next to Fox Rusher’s head shifted rapidly through edited scenes of broadcasts from around the world. They were careful not to dwell on any particular attack, but every scene was obviously violent: Mobs running through the streets of Paris with the Eifel Tower behind them; bodies covering a lawn in front of a church somewhere in Europe; a brief scene of carnage in a Japanese airport terminal; rioting and mayhem in the parking lots at Disney World. And on and on…
“There have been no official statements from Washington, but we now have word of a military alert and recall of all active duty personnel to their bases. Several state governors, including those of New York, New Jersey, Florida, California and Texas, have declared states of emergency and called up the National Guard in the past hour.
“The President is currently aboard Air Force One, returning from his latest twelve nation tour of Africa. White House spokesmen report that he is being kept fully informed of developments. Due to violence in Washington, DC, we are told that Air Force One is being diverted to an undisclosed location, but the President is expected to address the nation later today.
“Meanwhile we must report that GNN has lost communications with several of our sister stations across the country. In fact, we just lost the live feed from our New York studio that was providing footage from Times Square. However, GNN will continue to broadcast live from our Los Angeles headquarters. Power outages and large fires are being reported in many metropolitan areas. Emergency services are flooded with 911 calls. Cell phone networks are overloaded...”
“What the hell is happening?” asked Fisher, without expecting an answer. Scott simply shook his head and frowned.
“Although we have received no official direction from Federal authorities, GNN now cautions all viewers to stay calm, stay where you are, and lock your doors to protect yourselves from this mysterious outbreak of violence. We will return with more breaking news after this short public service announcement on disaster preparedness.”
Scott leaned back and turned towards Captain Fisher as the screen switched to a test pattern. “Jordie, please tell Marty in the com-room to DVR this channel and all other satellite news programming from every country we can pick up. We’ll want to be able to review all the news available if this situation continues to deteriorate.”
“Why do you think the situation will deteriorate?” asked Fisher.
“You heard him,” responded Scott. “They’re already losing contact with some cities. We need to record as much news as we can now, because we might not be able to get any news later.”
“You think it’s so bad that we’ll lose communications?”
“I think it might be a lot worse than that. But let’s not panic the rest of the crew and passengers just yet. Tell Marty to cut off TV and internet access to all cabins, staterooms, and public areas except this room and your office. Oh, and let Miguel watch and record the Spanish news channels in the navigation room. We’re heading towards Mexico at the moment and I want to know what’s happening there too. Tell Marty to leave the On-Demand movies working, so the passengers don’t get too upset. Just have him tell anyone who asks that the satellite feed is down. Then come back and we can try to sort this out and decide what to tell everyone else aboard. The last thing we need right now is a panic on this ship.”
Captain Fisher nodded and left the room. Scott keyed in the BBC on the satellite remote control, looking very grave. The female anchor looked scared…
“There is mass murder and mayhem taking place in London. Alarms are sounding here in the BBC studios. Violent intruders are reported on this floor. We need security now. Does anyone here have a gun?”
Scott shook his head sadly. The progressive UK gun laws had just become a suicide pact. It was time to change the channel. He wanted news of what was happening back home in Southern California…
“This is live coverage from Sky Eye 3 over the Santa Monica Freeway. Forget about traffic reports. As you can see, nothing is moving down there except for fleeing victims and murderous zombies. That’s right folks, I said zombies. I’ve been watching this develop as the sun comes up over Santa Monica Boulevard and it’s the real Dawn of the Dead down there. Do not leave your house this morning. If you have already left your home, try to get back now. Lock your doors. Don’t take the kids to school. Don’t open your door to get the paper. This looks like Armageddon…”
Since the Captain would be gone for a few minutes at least, Scott decided it was time to wake his wife, Michelle, and tell her the crazy news. He walked quietly into the bedroom of the master suite and bent to kiss her on the cheek. Her long blond hair was draped across half of the regal and gorgeous face that had once graced the cover of fashion magazines. Scott took a moment to appreciate her beauty and his good fortune.
“Honey? Wake up baby,” he said gently. She stirred and opened her eyes slowly.
“It’s too early, Scott,” she complained. “I was up most of the night reading a book. Let me sleep, honey. Please…”
“Sorry, baby, but you need to wake up now,” Scott pressed. “I’m afraid there’s some terrible news.”
“What is it?” Michelle said as she sat up quickly. “Is Billy okay?”
<
br /> “Take it easy,” said Scott soothingly. “Everyone on the ship seems fine.” He paused and tried to figure out how to explain the news to her. “The problem isn’t here. It’s the rest of the world. People everywhere are going crazy. They’re acting like zombies and killing each other. From what they’re showing on the news, it looks like the whole world is falling apart, or most of it anyway.”
“Stop it, Scott, that’s not funny,” she responded in a tone of voice that, after years of marriage, he recognized as impending anger. “I know it’s April Fool’s Day, damn it, but that has got to be the worst joke you have ever made.”
For just a moment Scott had to stop and wonder if she was right. It was April first. Could this be a practical joke of some kind? One concocted by the media? Something like Orson Wells did on his radio show with War of the Worlds back in the 1930s? Was it possible? Special effects were so advanced that they could generate anything with a computer these days. But whatever false hope he grasped at in that moment was crushed as he recalled how all of the news networks were reporting the same catastrophes. This was the real deal. Michelle must have seen the moment of doubtful hope in his eyes, followed by despair, and that more than anything else brought her up short.
“You’re really serious, aren’t you?” she said in a much more timid voice. Scott nodded sadly and bent down to give her a hug.
“I don’t know exactly what’s happening,” Scott said, “but whatever it is, honey, I promise I’m going to do everything I can to protect you and Billy and everyone on this ship. But the first step in doing that is learning as much as possible about what’s going on out there. I’m going back to watch the news. We’ll call a meeting of everyone aboard as soon as we get a grip on what’s happening and what we plan to do about it.” Michelle gave Scott a haunted look as she gathered the down comforter around her.
Scott returned to the media room and began channel surfing again. He stopped on C-SPAN when he noticed that it was displaying a test pattern with the words “Emergency Broadcast System” across it. The speakers relayed the familiar buzzing alarm that usually accompanied regular tests of the alert system. Then an automated voice gave a different announcement than Scott was used to hearing as printed words scrolled across the bottom of the screen.
“This is the Emergency Broadcast System. This is not a test. A state of emergency has been declared for the following areas: The United States of America. This satellite network will provide national alert bulletins from the Federal Emergency Management Agency and Department of Homeland Security. Please tune into local radio and television stations for news and instructions in your area. This is not a test. A state of emergency has been declared for the following areas: The United States of America. This is the Emergency Broadcast System. This is not a test.”
That disturbing announcement was followed by the familiar buzzing alarm tones and then the message repeated. Scott listened and reread the words as they scrolled across the screen once more. He felt a shiver run down his spine. Somehow this emergency announcement was more chilling than watching people tear each other apart. Those scenes on the news could have come from any special effects studio, but this announcement made it all too real. He changed the channel.
*****
Interlude in Hell
Near Los Angeles International Airport: 6:25 AM, April 1
Carl Stiller was still awake when the first hint of dawn filtered through the windows of the ambulance. In fact, the thought of sleep had never crossed his mind. Snarling and moaning bodies continued to pound against the exterior of the vehicle. He knew that he was in shock, but he didn’t know what to do about it. Nothing made any sense.
His wife had turned into a homicidal maniac and apparently killed the cab driver. A paramedic that he had turned to for help had tried to kill him. And now there were a lot more lunatics outside trying to tear the ambulance open with their bare hands. Carl had sat there in disbelief for hours. But the thin light of dawn seemed to trigger his survival instincts again. He was alive and he wanted to stay that way.
Moving slowly, Carl made his way up to the driver’s compartment of the ambulance. He had been there once before to lock the doors immediately after climbing into the vehicle. After that he had moved back into the rear compartment and huddled in confused terror. But now he wanted to look outside and try to understand what was happening.
The taxi cab was still nosed into the side of the ambulance. Carl couldn’t tell if there was anyone still moving inside it. He knew that his priority should be finding out if his wife, Pricilla, was still alive and in need of assistance. But he couldn’t forget the image of her teeth ripping into the cabby’s neck. There was no way that Pricilla could ever have done that. Ergo: that was not Pricilla. His mind couldn’t explain it, but his soul was certain of it. So Carl’s attention slipped past the taxi and took in the crowd of other lunatics surrounding the ambulance. There were at least six of them in his line of sight and he suddenly realized that he was now in theirs too. The interior of the ambulance was still quite dark, but at least two of the maniacs outside seemed to be staring at him and were moving towards the windows with outstretched arms and gaping mouths.
“What the fuck?” Carl muttered to himself. There was something about these people that triggered an instinctive and primal fear in his gut. They also reminded him of the creatures he had seen depicted in previews for zombie movies. Carl had never watched a zombie movie himself. He thought they were stupid and unrealistic. Now he found himself questioning that assumption when something that certainly looked like a zombie, complete with ripped flesh and bloody teeth, pressed up against the passenger side window next to him.
Carl glanced over and saw that the keys were still in the ignition. Without a second thought, except escape, he slid into the driver’s seat and started the engine. The headlights came on automatically and every fiend in the area charged towards him. He dropped the gear shift into drive and hit the gas, knocking zombies out the way as the ambulance ripped off the taxi’s front bumper and fishtailed out of the parking lot onto Sepulveda Boulevard.
He turned north at first, but there was a major pileup at the intersection with Lincoln, so he made a quick U-turn that almost rolled the ambulance over and sped south, back towards LAX. The zombies – yes he decided to call them zombies – that had chased him out of the urgent care parking lot filled the street. Carl just closed his eyes and stepped on the gas as he plowed through them. The ambulance lurched and started making unusual sounds, but it kept running. Carl accelerated past the turnoff for the LAX terminals and rental car returns before he realized that he was heading for the tunnel that crossed below the runways.
Carl hesitated and started to lift his foot off the gas, but more zombies were pouring onto the street from every direction. He really didn’t have much choice but to press on into the tunnel. He swerved to avoid a wrecked Volkswagen that seemed to have imploded when it hit a zombie. Then he saw them. Dozens of zombies were swarming around a shuttle bus that had crashed into the tunnel wall behind the little Volkswagen. Perhaps the maniacs were trying to reach normal people trapped inside. Carl didn’t have time to worry about their fate. There was just enough room for the ambulance to pass the wreck, but the gap was full of zombies.
Once again Carl stepped down on the gas and aimed for the zombies. This time his path of travel was so tight that he was afraid to close his eyes, so he saw all the details of the impacts, especially the one that drove the head of a zombie through the center of his windshield. Carl kept accelerating as the ghoul in front of his face flapped its broken arms outside the windshield. Jaws snapped open and closed inside the tatters of a nightmarish face that was lodged mere inches from Carl’s hands which were clenched to the steering wheel.
Carl swallowed the bile rising in his throat and leaned away from the grotesquely animated head as he struggled to maneuver the battered ambulance through the remainder of the tunnel. It was a terrifying gauntlet, full of more impacts with uncar
ing bodies, but there was light at the end of the tunnel. As soon as he emerged into the pale glow of dawn and left the crowd of zombies behind, Carl stopped the ambulance, opened the door and puked.
While he was bent out of the door he noticed a multipurpose fireman’s tool strapped next to his seat. Without much thought he reached down to retrieve it. There was a small axe head and opposing pick spike on one end and a curved pry-bar on the other end. It was solid steel and felt good in his hand. Carl looked back at the flailing zombie in the windshield and made a decision. He raised the tool with the spike forward and drove its point into the top of the zombie’s head, producing a satisfying crunch. The body stopped moving immediately. Carl found himself grinning stupidly as he pulled the spike out of the skull and raised his foot to push the now truly dead zombie back out of the windshield. The ambulance was shaking and grinding as Carl shifted it back into gear and started driving south.
It was only then that Carl realized that a radio had turned on when he started the ambulance. It was tuned to the fire department band which told its own story of disaster.
“All units, be advised of reports of unexplained violence at Harbor UCLA, Saint John’s, MLK and Rampart hospitals. Dispatch does not recommend transport of any patients to any hospital at this time. Treat any injuries in the field and hold in place for instructions.”
“Ladder 41? Squads 16, 27, 19, and 57? Engines 23, 75, 14 and 44? Rescue 66, 38, 45, 81, 18 and 6? What is your status? Please respond.”
Carl had a good idea why those units weren’t answering. A placard on the face of the radio in the ambulance identified it as Rescue 66. He was tempted to pick up the microphone and tell them what happened, but wasn’t sure if they would believe him, or arrest him.
Chapter 2: The End of the World as We Knew It
“It's the end of the world as we know it and I feel fine.” – REM
01 Voyage of the Dead Page 2