Ridgetown: A Zombie Apocalypse Novel

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Ridgetown: A Zombie Apocalypse Novel Page 18

by Philip Radford


  As they moved through the trees, Helen couldn't help but wonder what had happened to Liz and Mark after they had thrown themselves over the wall. She didn't think that they would have simply leapt over the wall to their deaths, they seemed a lot smarter than that, but they would have landed right in the middle of the horde. Maybe they had each carved a path through the creatures and Helen hadn't seen it. Any downed corpses or signs of a fight would have been nearly instantly covered by the surge of more zombies taking their places.

  By the time they had traversed to the fifth tree, Helen and Luke had enough of a clearing to jump down. Luke dropped to the ground first while Helen waited ready to help him back up in case of emergency. He scoped the immediate area and signaled that it was safe to drop down.

  Immediately, they backtracked to the closest zombies and used their weapons. Helen killed four and Luke killed two before they attracted enough attention for them to need to back away. Helen killed another before retreating and was considering attacking another before she heard Luke's voice.

  "We need to lead them away from the estate."

  Helen conceded to Luke's advice and slowly backed away to stand alongside him. A couple of zombies shambled towards them but their plan was to attract as many as possible.

  "Hey! Hey!" Helen shouted at the zombies.

  "What are you doing?" Luke whispered, unable to get Helen to take her eyes off the zombies in front of them.

  "We need them to follow us so I'm trying to get their attention. Hey, you stupid sacks of worms!"

  Luke shrugged and scoured the ground for a decent sized rock. He picked up one that was half the size of a fist and threw it deep into the horde as hard as he could. It hit a bald zombie square on the back of the head, causing its head to jerk forwards slightly. Slowly, it turned around and stared at Luke with its one remaining eye. It reached out with its crippled arms and leant forwards, pushing in the opposite direction to most of the other zombies. Other nearby creatures turned to see what the one eyed zombie was reaching for and joined it when they saw Luke and Helen. More had begun to pay attention to Helen's shouts and also changed the direction of their attention.

  Luke and Helen started to lead the new group down the road and sped up as they got closer to the pub. When they were within fifty meters of the playhouse, they turned and ran the rest of the way. They quickly began to climb and had given themselves a comfortable amount of time to get to the top of the wall and collect a couple of spears. They waited for their group to enter the playhouse, not speaking, trying to prepare themselves for the next round of assault.

  The spears they were using were made from long metal poles that looked like they had been used by a lifeguard at a swimming pool. Despite being long and sturdy, they were relatively lightweight and surprisingly easy to maneuver. At the end of the poles were jagged pieces of metal that were welded in place. Luke's consisted of three separate blades, each serrated with large teeth and pointing in different directions, the largest blade sticking straight out of the end of the pole and the other two angled outwards. Helen's looked similar, despite it only having a single blade it still looked deadly. They moved along the platform at the top of the playcentre towards the front of the building so they could stab their weapons closer to the entrance. The tension grew as they waited, knowing that once the first few zombies entered the building, it was going to be a long battle.

  The first few zombies stumbled into the playcentre, Luke and Helen dispatched them as soon as they were in range of the spears. They stabbed at the next few as soon as they were close enough and quickly realised they were going to block the entrance with corpses. They moved towards the back of the building and waited as the zombies began to pour in.

  Waiting for the zombies seemed counterintuitive to Helen who had been listening to Mark's ethos for the past couple of days regarding not taking your safety for granted and being careful not to give yourself a false sense of security. The whole act of drawing them into the playcentre was the opposite of what they had been trying to achieve at the estate but being at the top of the climbing wall offered them the best protection for the situation.

  Luke stabbed at the heads of the zombies and moved on to the next as quickly as he could. Even though the blades were so sharp, it still required considerable effort to drive it into a zombie's skull, they began to give their spears a slight twist with each stab to help jerk the brain and increase the damage. There wasn't even a difference between how fresh a corpse was, an old disheveled zombie with half of its skull exposed was just as tough as a fresh zombie's that only looked a few days old.

  Those were the worst, the recently dead. On more than one occasion, Luke stabbed at a creature and suddenly wondered whether it was a survivor due to its lack of decomposition. One in particular, a young man in a thick duffel coat and beanie hat didn't have any obvious serious injuries. Sure, he had looked pale, but not like the extreme shades that most zombies had. It could have been down to a fever, which could also account for the staggering if he had become delirious. Luke pulled the blade free and saw the dark red blood pour out of the wound, he told himself that it would have been brighter if it was oxygenated, that of a living person. He rationalised that a living person wouldn't have survived ten seconds surrounded by the unread, even in the extreme stages of a fever. Luke berated himself for allowing himself to get distracted, he immediately began stabbing again in an indiscriminate fashion.

  Helen could tell that Luke was getting tired, so was she. Their attacks were becoming less accurate, sometimes requiring two or three blows to finish a zombie. Although they weren't coming into the playhouse as quickly, the mob was still coming in.

  "Luke, where is the generator over here?"

  "The back-up for the church? It's in the safe room in the pub. Why?"

  Helen rested for a moment, staring at the growing crowd below as she continued to speak.

  "I was wondering if we could borrow a few volts to wipe all of these out in one go."

  Luke pulled his spear free from another zombie, it had pierced the zombie in the shoulder and done little damage. The zombie briefly staggered before reaching up at them undeterred.

  "Technically, it's the amps that are lethal, not the volts."

  Luke's comment earned a raised eyebrow from Helen.

  "Sorry. We'd have to soak them to help the electricity jump between them. I don't know if the sprinklers still work, plus we'd risk soaking and cooking ourselves."

  "We have to try. Wouldn't we be protected because of all the cushioning and rubber between us and them? I mean, if we could fire it down there, we'd be okay up here, right?"

  Luke looked worried, more worried than usual, Helen could tell that he wasn't convinced. She'd barely convinced herself, so she wasn't that surprised. They needed to finish this group quickly, she had lost track of how long they had been in the playcentre but she was worried about the others back at the estate and especially Mark and Liz, she needed to know they were okay.

  "You try to set the sprinklers off and I'll see what I can do about the generator."

  Luke sounded decisive, displaying a hint of leadership that Helen hadn't seen before. She wondered if it had been something that had been repressed or whether it was a part of him that only came out it extreme situations.

  "How do I do that?"

  "If I knew that, I'd be setting them off while you looked at the generator." He shouted as he disappeared through the opening at the front of the building.

  Helen shouted at the zombies below, gaining the attention of a couple that had been following Luke. She wanted to make sure none wandered outside of what was about to become a killing room. Well, it would be as long as she could figure out how to set the sprinklers off.

  Helen thought back to fire safety training at her old job. She remembered being told that the sprinklers where she worked were basically just glass vials holding back the water. Once the heat from a fire got too strong, the vial would melt or crack and release the water. Hel
en took a minute to think about how she could create a flame and get it close enough to the sprinklers without setting the whole place on fire. When it registered she didn't have anything to create a flame with, she decided brute force would have to do. She started with the furthest sprinkler she could reach with the spear, stabbing at it as she had been doing with the zombies. Stabbing sprinklers however, was a lot harder. She had to fight gravity, aiming the spear upwards constantly. Whereas she had been attacking zombies closest to her, now she was having to stretch out as far as she dared reach without risking falling into the waiting clutches or dropping the spear.

  She bashed at the sprinkler, failing to score a direct hit due to the distance and the narrowness of the blade. She resorted to swiping at it, the first blow glancing off the sprinkler and nearly causing her to drop the spear. She held on as tightly as possible, readying herself for the collision and swung again. The metal housing of the sprinkler bent to the side and she could see water trickling out and leaking onto a zombie below. She swiped again, this time ripping the housing free and causing water to rain down on the furthest zombies.

  Spurred on by her success, she dealt with the second one, equally as far, quicker. The closer ones were much easier as she was able to swing the blade with more force, the extension of the pole giving extra leverage. Water was now raining down on the pit of undead below her, she was reluctant to break the sprinklers too close to her in case it put Luke and herself at risk.

  She was about to go looking for Luke when he came back through the opening he had left through, now clutching a bright orange cable. Helen walked over to meet him, just as she reached him, Luke stumbled and dropped the cable. Helen's eyes went wide as she saw the high voltage cable with the severed end dance through the air towards her. She instinctively reached out for it, without thinking grabbing the end. She clenched her eyes tightly shut as her body waited for the sudden surge of electricity to reach her, but it didn't.

  She opened one eye and stared at the cable in her hand, still wincing as she waited for something to happen. When nothing did, she opened her other eye and looked at Luke.

  "Oh, it's not turned on." He said matter of factly. "Did you think it was turned on?"

  Helen wasn't sure whether she was more relieved or angry about her fake near-death experience. She handed the cable back to Luke, jerking her arm out and not speaking to make it clear that she was less than impressed.

  "I'm not gonna run round with a live cable, that'd be dangerous."

  Helen wasn't sure if Luke saw the irony in his statement considering what they were about to try, she let it slide without comment.

  Luke took the cable off her, pulled a wire stripper from his back pocket and exposed the wires further, removing more of the rubber from the cable.

  "How long do you think the sprinklers will keep going for?" He asked.

  "Don't know, maybe it's not a finite thing and we'll need to turn the water off?"

  "Well, they look wet enough for now. I'm gonna have to go back into the pub to turn the power on, you make sure that end stays down there ." He looked at her shoes. "Pin it down with your foot, you'll be fine with those soles. As long as the dangerous end stays down there, we'll be okay. I'll come back in and make sure everything's okay, when they're all well cooked, I'll turn it back off again. Sound like a plan?"

  Helen was pleased to see this other side of Luke. "Yeah, sounds like a plan." She smiled.

  Luke looked nervous again, as if the smile had disturbed the fine balance of his confidence. As soon as he turned to leave, Helen fed the cable down to the horde, still grabbing uselessly at her. She pinned it down with both feet and waited for Luke to turn the power on, the noise of the horde was too loud for her to have any kind of communication with Luke.

  A zombie grabbed the dangling cable and pulled on it sharply. Standing with both feet together crippled Helen's balance and her feet were swept from under her. Her hips hit the platform, only slightly winding her but sending a flash of pain through her body, She grasped at the surface for anything to grab hold of. With her hands finding nothing but the spongy floor, Helen tried desperately to pull herself up, leaning as much of her upper body weight as forward as possible. For a moment, she thought she was going to fall as she kicked her legs wildly trying to give herself some momentum. She began to slip backwards and was convinced she felt something brush against one of her shoes and prayed that it wasn't a zombie. Her rational mind told her that she was well out of reach of any zombies but being in such a vulnerable position made her imagination run away with her, convincing her the zombies were climbing on each other or had extraordinarily long arms. The moment they became electrified, the zombies would fry anything they touched, including her. She allowed herself to turn her head, finding that it was the cable being whacked against her. She was out of reach of the zombies still but it didn't mean she was safe. She needed to pull herself up or she was at risk of falling and either being electrocuted or eaten, neither were very appealing.

  The noise of the zombies sounded even louder from the height she was now at, Helen wasn't sure if it was the acoustics from where her head was or the excitement of the zombies as they were closer to a fresh meal. She shouted for Luke but knew that he wouldn't be able to hear over the noise. Not knowing when the power was going to come on was petrifying, with every kick of her legs she expected to feel a stabbing sensation followed by excruciating pain. Helen knew she was letting panic take control of the situation and she needed to stop it. Panicking would only make things worse, she needed to calm down and take her time.

  Instead of kicking wildly, she coordinated her leg movements as if she was doing the breaststroke in a swimming pool. She pushed against the platform with her arms at the same time and felt more of her hips, which were still throbbing, inching towards the top of the platform. After a couple of kicks, the tops of her legs were touching the platform and she had enough of her body up to lift herself to safety. She tilted to her left and brought her right leg onto the platform, keeping her weight forward. As she brought her other leg up, Helen heard a loud crack followed by an even louder humming noise.

  She quickly got to her feet and looked down at the horde, all of whom were jerking in place. The smell hit Helen before she noticed the smoke emitting from each of them, they were literally cooking in front of her. Helen thought she had gotten used to the smell of the undead but the cooking of their flesh magnified the stench a hundred times. She had to hold her breath to try to help her from being sick, the odor burning her nostrils without her being able to smell it. She didn't want to take any chances so she fulfilled her job of standing on the live cable, this time only with one foot and keeping her other foot apart a shoulder's width.

  Although all the zombies stayed rooted to the spot, some twitched aggressively whilst others stood perfectly still. The humming noise had gotten quieter but there was still an occasional snap or popping sound. Helen watched eyeballs melting and congealed blood pouring from mouths and open wounds. Skin darkened as it sizzled and hair singed. A couple of the more decrepit corpses dropped to the ground and stopped twitching but most stayed up. Helen was memorized and hadn't noticed Luke reenter the playhouse.

  "Is it working? Whoa..."

  He stood next to Helen and watched the disturbing scene of corpses caught in a twisted dance. Helen felt sad as she watched them, almost being able to see the humanity in them again as they were frozen in place.

  "I'll turn it off." Luke muttered somberly, either sensing Helen's emotion or feeling it himself.

  The corpses twitched for a few more seconds until, all at once, they dropped to the floor. The humming had stopped and there were no noises coming from any of the zombies, Helen had expected at least a couple to survive. All that remained were the lifeless bodies, still being showered gently by the broken sprinklers and the stench of death that hung in the air. Seeing them all lay there made the scale of the outbreak and its casualties more real, a tiny visual representation of the magn
itude of what had happened.

  Helen stared at the bodies without speaking, lost in her own thoughts until she was startled out of them by Luke gently placing his hand on her shoulder.

  "We need to check on the others."

  Helen knew he was right, and that was all he needed to say for her to get her game face back on.

  Chapter Nine

  The climb over the corpses had been unsettling for Helen, the bodies moved under their weight, shifting and nearly sending Luke and Helen sprawling. Even though they had waited to see if any of the zombies moved before they climbed down, Helen still expected one to suddenly revive itself and grab at her, sinking its teeth into her ankle. The situation never materialized and they exited the building unharmed. Glad to be out, Helen decided she wasn't going to volunteer to clear the bodies out when it came time to clear up.

  They had run down the street in silence, glad to see the lack of zombies on the street but worrying that the rest of them were inside Ridgetown. As they approached the gates, the piles of bodies that were lay inside was stomach-churning. It was impossible to tell which ones had been residents of Ridgetown and which had been zombies but the pockets of bodies told a story. Each pocket of bodies signaled a resident that had been overpowered or overrun, caught in a corner or found trying to hide. They had been attacked by a pack of zombies until another resident had killed the pack or become a victim themselves. It was entirely possible the original resident could have turned and reanimated, only to attack their attempted savior, something Helen had seen many times before. There were no other signs of life inside, no one moving around or sounds of anyone shouting for help. The lack of shouts was unnerving, making Helen wonder if there was anyone left.

 

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