The outside of Culpeper was ringed by residential neighborhoods. When the town had living people in it, the locals knew to cut through one neighborhood to get from the main road through town over to Route 15. That route was my habit and I instinctively turned into the neighborhood that day. We were almost through that neighborhood when I heard a blood curdling scream.
Simultaneously all of the trucks came to a halt. I grabbed my new spear as Leo and I dismounted the Jeep and ran a hundred yards to see a man in shorts and a tee shirt get tackled to the ground. He was screaming, trying to get away from what was left of a woman. Six months ago she would have been a reasonably attractive girl. She was wearing little tiny shorts that said PINK across her ass. The pink shorts were stained brown and she had a little bit of a white tee shirt left on. Most of the shirt had been ripped away at some point, exposing her from the neck down. Almost all the flesh was missing from her neck down, the bones of her rib cage shone in the last of the daylight. Based on the amount of missing flesh around her midsection, I would say she’d been turned by several zombies feasting on her. The tee shirt neck was still intact and one sleeve. The rest of it hung down her back, like a cape covered in dried blood.
We ducked back around the corner of large house with pale blue siding. I stopped behind some prickly bushes, to take stock of the scene.
Leo started to charge in, but I grabbed her hand and stopped her. Something didn’t seem right. I quickly studied the scene. There were no weapons on the ground nearby; the man had no back pack on. ”Who would be smart enough to survive this long and then leave the house without weapons or a pack?” I whispered to Leo. ”Something is wrong.”
“He could have dropped them when he ran,” she said softly. “He could have lost them. He could have been asleep and they surprised him.”
“Sure, but something doesn’t feel right. Do you feel it?” I whispered
“No, I see a man that needs help,” she whispered fiercely.
“Leo, he was dead the minute he got tackled. There’s nothing we can do now except put him out of his misery. This is wrong. My gut tells me something is wrong.”
Into the throat mic, I whispered “Bookbinder, check out our position, head around behind the house, there’s something wrong here. Have John and Marshall move up past the yellow house to our left, but circle over a block before coming up this way.”
Leo and I stood there, transfixed by the man’s screams. ”Help!” He yelled as I poked my head around the corner “My name is Andrew Zione, Help! I’m humaaa”. His cries left off into a gurgle of screams as the zombie bit into his crotch, ripping meat from the inside of his leg, I could hear its teeth scraping Andrew’s thigh bone.
The thing pulled its head away dragging tendons with it like floss between the festering corpses teeth, blood spurted from Andrew’s leg wound. The zombie chewed twice and swallowed the hunk of thigh meat. The next bite the zombie took was Andrew’s manhood, ripping it away from his body, chewing slowly. The screams raised several octaves and became louder, as the zombie dove in for a third bite, peeling the flesh away from his belly, allowing Andrew’s guts to slide out like links of raw sausage onto the grass.
“Fuck, how is he still alive?” I said. The screams still haunt me.
“Vic, I… We… We can’t… This can’t go on.” Leo stammered.
“Leo, there’s something very wrong. This is a setup, I can feel it.”
I considered running in there, a shadow shot out from my body. When shadow-me got two feet from Andrew’s decimated body its head exploded and it fell over sideways.
“There’s a sniper somewhere.” I whispered into the mic.
“Sir, M1 is breaching the houses to the south. Marshall and John are heading around to the north. We’ll find it.”
I tried to speak quietly using my subspace voice, focused entirely on John’s aura in my mind, attempting to speak only to him. “John, there’s a sniper that’s got us pinned here. I can’t see him. We can’t move. Find him and take it out.”
“Leo, did you hear me just then?”
“I didn’t hear a thing.”
“Yes, I was trying to talk directly to John. I hope he heard me.”
Andrew kept screaming. This girl was definitely being controlled by something, I’ve only seen a few zombie attacks like this one, mostly on that first day, but those zombies were ravenous, they bit and ate whatever parts came near their mouths. These bites are being chosen to inflict the maximum pain without killing the victim. The zombie girl moved upwards, leaving a trail of his guts lying on the grass. She sat on his chest and took a bite of Andrew’s face, ripping his nose off. Fresh blood spattered the ghoul’s face, as she sat up and slowly chewed, looking directly at us. Andrew’s screams became wet, gurgling moans of pain. He was writhing under her, but her knees held his arms pinned securely.
The rancid corpse turned around and put her ass on Andrews face as she reached into his belly and pulled out a rope of thick slimy guts. I’d swear she looked directly at me and smiled before she bit his intestine in half. Stinking bile, so strong we could smell it from our spot hiding under a bush leaked out of the intestine, down her chin, dripping into the man’s stomach cavity.
Andrew’s moans became quieter, muffled when the zombie sat down on his face, smothering his anguished cries. Almost all of the undead we’d encountered had shit themselves and of course they’d never bothered to clean up the natural release at death. At least Andrew had no nose with which to smell the six month old rotting feces covered ass that was smothering him to death while the zombie ate his guts. Finally the muffled moaning stopped completely.
At last, we heard a shot ring out from the south, followed by Bookbinder’s voice on the radio “Sniper terminated. All clear sir.”
I stepped around the corner of the house, sig in my hand ready to put both corpses out of their misery. When I get in sight of the bloody mess on the ground, there are no zombies to be found. No footprints in the grass, no blood trail, no nothing. Just a bloody, mashed down spot in the long grass and a bit of intestine lying on the lawn.
“What the fuck?” I swore to myself.
Leo sobbed into my shoulder. The horror of what we just saw was too much for even the tough Spartan woman. I turned and hugged her tightly for a moment before we walked back to the Jeep.
The ride home was quiet. We saw no more zombies as we sped down the highway, paying no attention to the speed limit signs we passed. It wasn’t likely we’d ever pass another car.
We spotted a herd of nine deer off to the side of the road. In the rear view mirror I saw John point his pistol out the side of the truck he was driving. As he did, I slowed the Jeep. He fired two shots and two deer dropped over sideways where the stood. The Jeep bounced easily over the edge of the road and down a small bank. The rest of the crew kept going the last two miles to the house as I pulled up to the two dead deer.
“Help me load these.” I said, hopping out the driver’s side of the Jeep.
Leo stepped down off the other side and said “Poor deer, never had a chance. At least when I hunt I give them a sporting chance, I run them down.”
“Leo, these deer died to feed us. They were never afraid, they never felt anything. I’m grateful for the meat. There is no sport in you running down a buck. You can run 100 times faster than it can.” I chided.
Leo looked hurt, her face scrunched into a frown. I stepped towards her, wrapping her in my arms.
“I’m sorry darlin’. I’m a little out of sorts from watching that guy Andrew, but I couldn’t risk your life for him, he was infected by the time we saw him. I couldn’t risk you. What if that sniper had been as good at shooting as John? What if he shot you? I buried my head in her shoulder and hugged her for a long time.
We loaded the two carcasses up on the hood of the Jeep and headed for home. It had been a long day, I was tired and I still had to find out how The CVS and Clinic raids went, dress and process these two deer and find some time to be a father to
my little boy, who I missed very much at that moment.
Chapter 5
State Police
Earlier that morning, the day Tookes went to the propane depot, Leon Scott watched Bookbinder stride purposely down the hill. The chill in the fall morning air made his breath visible as he walked. He’d spent the last hour in an early morning strategy meeting with The Four. He looked calm and in control.
“Listen up. Colonel Bookbinder is here. Attention!” Shouted Scott.
Nineteen men came running out of various places around the barn. They lined up in two straight rows and stood at attention on the gravel parking lot they used as the parade ground. Scott stood off to the side, facing the men.
“Colonel Bookbinder, Sir. Fire teams M1, M2, M3 and M5 present,” Scott reported. “M4 is out running a perimeter check, due back in twenty minutes,” said Bookbinder’s newly promoted Lieutenant.
“Command has need for medical supplies, communications equipment and fuel for cooking,” said Bookbinder.
“M2, you’re on homeland patrol, so you’re sitting this out. M1, we’re going to the police station to secure assets necessary to the mission. M3, your mission is to take the CVS off route 29 in downtown Culpeper. This is a hostile environment. The number of infected is expected to number in the tens of thousands in Culpeper and you’re heading right to the edge of a residential area. Your orders are to breach the CVS, acquire medical equipment and supplies, over the counter and prescription drugs. You are not to fire unless contact is overwhelming. Men, this is a silent mission. Get in and get out, no noise, no attention. Grab the assets and go. You leave in five minutes. Do you understand?”
“Sir, yes sir!” shouted M3's team members.
“M3, take the two explorers, grab your gear and go. Dismissed!”
“M5, your orders are as follows. Breach and clear the plastic surgery center on the corner of 1st and Market St. Obtain medical equipment, including diagnostic imaging equipment that can be transported, sutures, IV bags and kits and any drugs you can find. We’re setting up a clinic here, so make it complete boys. Mission parameters are the same as M3, no gunfire unless absolutely necessary. You’re one block off the center of downtown Culpeper, the highest population density area for fifty miles. Do not draw attention to yourselves. Breach gently, make sure you can lock the place up securely when you leave. We may need that clinic in the future and we may need it fast, I don’t want to have to re-clear the building if we have a wounded man bleeding out. Once you secure the premises, remove any corpses and haul them away from the building. We don’t want it to look like anyone’s been there. M5, do you understand your mission?”
“Sir, yes sir!” the members of M5 replied in unison.
“Good. Take the Ford Dually and the white F250. You know Tookes loves that white pickup, don’t wreck it. M5, you leave in five minutes, dismissed!”
“M2, ready yourselves for homeland patrol. You leave when M4 gets back. Dismissed!”
When everyone was gone except Bookbinder’s own team, he continued with the orders.
“M1. Our mission is two-fold. Command has directed us to recon the state police headquarters. They’ve also tasked us with keeping an eye out and being ready to back up any of the other teams as required. Our mission at the headquarters is to acquire police assets, vests, weapons, ammunition, communications equipment and vehicles.”
“Men, The Four are heading to the propane depot. Their mission is to secure cooking fuel for Mrs. Tookes. They’ve got the most open area and they’re a little cocky. We’ll need to back them up if they get in over their heads.”
“We leave in five minutes also. Get to it men, dismissed.”
Charlie headed quickly down to his room in the grooms cottage to gather his stuff. He’d taken the small one room cottage for himself. He let anyone to use his bathroom at almost any time, his door was never locked. Inside the small, cozy cottage he knelt down at his foot locker, unlocked it and retrieved his weapons. He almost never openly wore even a side arm on the property, both as a show of respect for the children in the area and to show that he was confident in their safety. He did carry a small frame 9mm handgun concealed in the rear waistband of his pants; he’d been carrying that weapon for 15 years and just didn’t feel right without it.
He strapped on his desert camo combat vest and slid in the armor plates. The chest strap for his HK g3 attached to D-rings on his vest. The H&K was .308 caliber carbine. It was almost as powerful as the rifle Tookes called Sammie and just as accurate at ranges out to a hundred yards. It had a collapsible stock which allowed it to be more effective indoors and an ACOG scope for faster target acquisition. Bookbinder carried six twenty round magazines in his combat vest plus one in the rifle, Charlie alone could handle a small horde of infected.
He walked out of his cottage ready to do violence. His men were there waiting for him, already sitting in the explorer. Charlie knew they’d be bringing additional vehicles home, so they were riding packed tightly for the fifteen miles up through town.
They arrived at the police station in no time, the place looked deserted. The building itself was steel, Dalton Reineer exited the front passenger side of the vehicle and advanced on the eight foot chain link and barbed wire fence. He pulled a large pair of collapsible bolt cutters from his pack and unfolded the handles out to their full twenty-four inches. These cutters were military issue and easily cut through the padlock that was holding the fence closed.
Reineer removed the chain, looped it through one side of the fence and opened the gate, motioning Hostetler to drive through. On the way to the police station, they’d discussed entry points, it seemed most logical to breach through the back door near the giant roll up doors. There were a dozen police cars parked inside the chain link fence; two of them were explorers with full bull bars and inside prisoner cages.
The team approached the rear door in a formation that they’d practiced in the yard on Charlie’s cabin door a hundred times. Hostetler, Reineer and Garrett on the handle side, Johnson on the hinge side. Charlie stepped forward with a large Halligan style pry-bar. He drove the forked end into the crack between the latch and the frame and pried out and right, sending the door flying open to the left.
Johnson caught the door, giving Charlie room to step to the side between Hostetler and Reineer to recover from the prying outside the line of fire from the room. Hostetler and Reineer stepped forward as Charlie was stepping between them in a well choreographed dance. Charlie holstered the Halligan and shouldered his rifle. The two underlings cleared the entry way. They started way back from the door, taking small sections of the room. They stepped up, each step towards the doorway giving them a larger view into the room. They knelt on either side of the door, as Charlie stepped through to clear the blind corner just inside the door.
“Well done boys, that was textbook. Keep your wits about you. Garrett, tell me what you sense.”
“Nothing has been in this room in a long time. No tracks in the dust. I don’t hear anything walking around, Sir,” said Garrett.
“And what else Johnson?” Bookbinder quizzed the men. He never missed an opportunity to drive home their training.
“I don’t see anything moving through the windows. I think we’re good.”
“Dammit Johnson, use your nose.”
“I can’t smell anything. My nose is stuffy,” replied Johnson.
“You should quit smoking, it kills your senses. Would you smoke if it clouded your vision?” He asked again.
“Yes, Sir.” Said Johnson, “I mean no Sir—I mean, I should quit, Sir. I would not smoke if it clouded my vision, Sir.”
“Alright,” Bookbinder said. “I smell rotten meat. I smell stupid zombies in here. They’re not in this room, if they were that smell would have assaulted our noses, but they’re in here somewhere.”
Once the lesson was over they moved as a unit through the building clearing room by room. After the first room when it became clear that the building wasn’t full o
f infected, Charlie let his rifle hang and once again drew the halligan.
They’d come in via the police entrance, not the front door of the building. Charlie opened the door to the hallway and took a long smell. The stench of months old flesh was stronger in the hallway. Five steps down the hallway there were doors on the right and left. Charlie held up two fingers and then pointed to Reineer and himself. He pointed to Dalton, Hostetler and Johnson and pointed at the door across the hallway.
The team split into two groups and on Charlie’s mark each quietly turned the knob and opened their door. Charlie stepped into the gloomy room to see a corpse in a police uniform turn its head towards him. It was wearing glasses and still had its patrolman’s hat on. Its eyes locked on to him. They were milky and white but the hunger stood out in them. The creature walked forward into its desk and fell face-first onto a pile of folders. With the zombie bent over the desk like that, Charlie quickly closed the distance and lodged his halligan into its brain.
What Zombies Fear (Book 2): The Maxists Page 4