by Sue Edge
We turned and ran up the stairs as the monsters reached for us. To our relief, the stairs slowed the horde’s implacable onslaught, allowing us time to reach the next floor safely.
“Which way now?” B1 puffed. Jack was looking pale and spaced out as he hung limply between Ken and B1.
I nodded to the right. We hurried quickly but cautiously down the hallway. There was no sign of violence but the heavy silence was forbidding. As we reached a corner, I pointed to the right and whispered. “There it is.”
Midway down the hallway, the stairwell to the roof beckoned invitingly. As we quietly moved off, I suddenly noted where we were and stopped in my tracks. The others paused and looked at me quizzically.
I felt sick to my stomach as I realised what I was going to do. “I’m sorry, guys. I have to check on the children’s ward. If there’s a chance that any of them are still alive…” I tried to swallow the lump of fear in my throat. “I’ll catch up with you as soon as I can.”
Trembling, I clutched my stake hard and headed down the left hallway. My brain screamed at me to turn around and I wanted to, God knows, but how could I live with myself if I left helpless children to the mercy of those monsters making their way up the stairs?
“Shit.” Biggs said quietly behind me. I turned to see Mike and Biggs and then Emma hurrying after me.
“Let’s make this quick.” Biggs ordered.
B1 looked at us incredulously. “Are you kidding me?”
He tried to whisper harshly. “We haven’t got time for this! Those freaking zombies will be here any moment.”
I nodded. “I know.”
Turning, I trotted quickly down the hall without waiting to see who was following. This was my mission and I could not blame any of them for not coming.
As I neared the entrance to the children’s ward, I slowed and strained my ears for any sign of movement within. Nothing. I felt Mike’s breath in my ear. He nodded at Biggs who swung past with his weapon at ready.
My heart sank as he sucked in his breath quickly. I followed him as he slowly entered the ward. To my surprise, the whole group was still with me, even though B1 was glaring at me furiously.
My heart broke. Bed sheets lay bloody and tangled on the beds and strewn across the floor. A sob escaped my lips at the sight of a broken, torn body lying in a cot. Its head had been ripped off its little body. Ten beds and not one living soul in the room.
“Okay, can we go now?” B1 whispered loudly. I nodded wordlessly. As I turned to go, I heard something. A rustle. I held my hand up abruptly as I strained to hear it again. There! In the bathroom.
“It’s one of them!” B1 said, raising his gun. The men lined up their weapons as I ran forward and pulled at the door. It was locked but there is always a reverse lock for staff access. I flicked it and pulled open the door. There, huddled in the bathtub, was a girl, maybe 8 years old. Her eyes flew up to mine in terror as she scrabbled back against the smooth edge of the bath.
I bent forward hurriedly to soothe her. “It’s okay! See, I’m normal, like you.”
Sticking my stake in my belt, I grabbed her hand and pressed it against my warm cheek. “See?”
The fear dissipated from her eyes as she searched my face. Then, she flung herself at me and buried her face in my neck.
“Can we go now?” B1 demanded edgily. I picked the girl up in my arms and we headed for the doors.
“Too late.” Mike murmured, flinging up a hand to halt us. He peered around the corner and pulled back quickly. “They’re here.”
8
“Shit, shit shit!” B1 glowered malevolently at me and unceremoniously shook the now unconscious lad off him.
Ken carefully laid Jack down on the floor. “Maybe the doors will be strong enough to withstand them.”
Biggs shrugged. “Not much choice at this point.” B1 turned to glare at me pointedly.
“We have to hide.” The little girl suddenly spoke up, her voice shaky. “If they can’t see us, they can’t find us.”
We turned to look at her for a long moment and then we all moved quickly. Mike quietly shut and locked the doors while Ken dragged Jack out of sight. Although I knew that the bathroom would make a better hiding spot, I baulked at not being able to see what was going on. Instead, I pressed myself and the young girl against the wall beside the door, as did the others.
I held my breath as the moans and shuffling neared us. A little hand slipped into mine. I glanced down to see the little girl’s eyes were shut tightly as she gripped my hand. Squeezing back lightly, I tried to calm my breathing.
Go by, go by, go by. I begged silently. A body banged against the door. Emma gasped audibly. Biggs’ instinctively reached up and covered her mouth. I held my breath, waiting to see if she had been heard. Endless seconds passed. There was no change in the intensity of the noises in the hall. Slowly, I released my breath, daring to hope that we might make it.
“Aaahh!” A yell erupted from within the room. Frantically, I searched for the source. B1 was struggling to kick Jack away from him. Blood poured from his calf and I realised, with dread, that the young man was … gone. In his place knelt a vacant-eyed, slack-jawed monster with blood dripping down his chin.
B1 shot us a desperate look, half apology and half horror. “Get him off me or I swear to God…!” As everyone froze, I strode over and, placing a foot in the young man’s chest, pushed him over. As he reared up, teeth bared like an animal, I pulled out my stake and drove it through his eye with deliberation. Gunk shot up and splattered across my cheek.
“Shit!” B1 exclaimed, staring at me. I shot him a miserable, defiant look as I wiped the mess off my face.
“He’d turned. He was one of them. I had to do it.”
Before he could reply, a flurry of bangs commenced against the doors. They bulged open and through the gap between the doors, we could hear the undulating moans and eager growls of the zombies as they gathered around our room.
“Guess that means our cover’s blown.” Mike commented drily, removing the gum from his mouth and tossing it in a nearby bin.
“What are we going to do?” Emma said, her face ashen as her eyes darted to the slowly widening gap between the doors.
“I’m thinking.” Biggs snapped, his grey eyes searching the room.
“Maybe we can lock ourselves in the bathroom.” The little girl whispered as she made her way to my side again. I knelt down so I could meet her brown eyes. “What’s your name?”
“Jessie.” She said it so quietly, I could barely hear her.
“Jessie, it’s a good idea but we would probably be safe in there but we’d also be trapped with no way out. We won’t be able to get food or help.” She nodded unhappily.
As I looked around for a way out, my eyes fell on a cursing B1 as he tried to wipe blood from his leg with the corner of a sheet.
“We can make a sheet rope and climb down the side of the building!” I offered.
The others looked at me and then at each other. Biggs permitted himself a grim smile. “Unless anyone else has a better idea…?”
Swiftly, we gathered all the sheets in the room, bloody or not. As we knotted the sheets together, we kept an anxious eye on the doors which already seemed to be at bursting point.
“Hurry.” Biggs muttered through gritted teeth. No one responded to the self-evident statement. Within minutes, we tied on the last of the sheets.
“I think it should be long enough.” Emma declared. “We’re only three floors up.”
“Only.” Grumbled B1 as he limped over to the window and pushed it open. We gathered the thick rope of sheets and carried it to the window.
For the first time since this disaster began, I had the chance to see what was happening in the outside world and it devastated me in a way nothing else had today.
Up to now, I had managed to convince myself that this crisis was isolated to this hospital, that we would get out and be able to establish a quarantine. Above all, I had managed to persuade mysel
f that my family was still safe. That belief was shattered with a single glimpse through the window.
Across the road, I could see people running. Not the usual joggers and young people playing ball which were a normal sight on the esplanade, but desperate people running for their lives as a hundred or more zombie creatures poured into the picturesque park.
Mothers ran with toddlers in their arms. Backpackers batted at arms that grabbed at them. Children, chubby faced babes, stood in the middle of the beautiful lawn and cried miserably as pitiless figures encircled them. I sobbed in despair and fell back from the window. Those poor people. Michele. My babies.
B1 glanced at me inquiringly as he threw the rope through the window. Biggs tied the other end off to a bedpost and then dipped his head at Mike. “You’d better go first. Try to keep the area clear.”
Mike nodded and swung his leg over the sill. Emma touched my arm sympathetically. “Are you okay, Lori?”
She rolled her eyes, acknowledging the stupidity of the question in our present situation.
I took a deep breath and let it out slowly, nodding. I had to stay focused if I wanted to get out of here and find my children. Nothing else mattered. The press of a small body against mine reminded me of another responsibility I had taken on, and I resolved fiercely to keep Jessie safe, too.
The sound of a nail hitting the floor brought our eyes jerking back to the doors.
“Shit, shit, shit!” B1 yelled. “I’m getting out of here! He grabbed the rope and clambered out.
As another nail flew out, Biggs grimaced. “He’s an idiot but I think he has the right idea, folks.”
He waved his hand. “Women and children first, of course.”
Another place, another time, I might have argued with him but not today. After Emma tentatively swung herself over the windowsill, I grabbed Jessie and sat her on the ledge. She squealed and clung to me.
“No, Jessie.” I said firmly. “This is no different than climbing the rope at the playground. Just climb down as if you were showing off to your friends at the gym or something.”
She swallowed, and turning around, started clambering down the rope as if it were a beanstalk. I stifled an involuntary laugh and followed her, although with a lot less agility. My arms immediately started screaming in complaint as my legs scrabbled to get a grip on the rope.
Glancing below, I saw Mike had reached the pavement safely. His descent did not seem to have attracted any unwanted attention, thankfully, allowing him to pull out his weapon and stand guard in the alley. Above me, Ken paused on the windowsill; I guess he was worried that the rope wouldn’t bear the weight of more than three people at a time.
Thump! My eyes met Ken’s aghast eyes as the doors finally burst open under the pressure of the horde. From within the room, Biggs cursed loudly and start firing wildly. Pulling out his gun, Ken began shooting shakily into the crowd.
“Get the hell out, boy!” Biggs yelled.
Ken hesitated, then swung his other leg over the ledge and started clambering down the rope. I shook myself out of my momentary paralysis and kept moving downwards as the sounds of battle flowed over me like boiling oil. Biggs’ furious yells and curses floated over the moans of the zombies as he fired shot after futile shot.
Then the shooting stopped and the screaming started.
9
A whimper escaped my lips as I tried to block the horrific images that accompanied the screams. Four feet from the ground, I let go of the rope and stumbled a bit before regaining my balance.
Jessie rushed forward and clutched my skirt anxiously. Wrapping an arm around her thin shoulders, I looked around at the others. Silent tears poured down Emma’s face as Ken moved up beside her and gripped her hand tightly. B1 watched the road, flinching at each scream. Even normally impassive Mike looked grim. None of us said anything as we listened to the screams fade and finally cease.
B1 murmured “and then there were five” - he paused as he glanced at Jessie “and a half…”
A line formed between Mike’s dark brows as he came close to frowning. “Shut up, Roy.”
B1 shuffled his feet. “Just saying…”
I couldn’t speak, tears choking my throat. Biggs had been loud, short tempered and bossy but he’d also been brave and honorable, and ultimately, had sacrificed himself for us.
“I don’t know how much more of this I can take.” Emma’s voice trembled. How much more could any of us take, I wondered. How much fear, pain, and death can any person bear before they break?
It felt like I had been drowning in a sea of terror for an eternity. Even greater than my desperate desire to live was the unbearable fear for my children. It wrapped, like heavy chains, ever tighter around my heart with each passing minute. Were they safe, were they afraid, were they crying for me somewhere?
Ken started to speak, stopped and cleared his throat. “So what do we do now? We can’t hide out in this lane forever.”
Mike nodded. “We need to work on getting a vehicle and finding a safe location.”
He looked around at us. “Any chance one of you has a car nearby?”
“I was late this morning so I’m parked just across the road.” I offered dryly, “but I don’t think it will help us, seeing the car keys are in the ER staff room.”
Mike sighed. “Okay, let’s see what the situation is out front.”
Cautiously, we moved down the alley, keeping as close to the wall as possible. Every excruciating step of the way, I kept expecting to see the monsters appear in the lane. As we neared the front, Mike waved at us to stop. He inched forward carefully and peered around the edge of the hospital wall for a few seconds.
Pulling back, Mike looked at us impassively. “Well, there’s good news and there’s bad news.”
B1 (Roy, I corrected myself) snorted quietly. “This whole day has been bad news!”
Mike ignored him and continued. “There are at least fifty corpses milling in front of the ER.”
“I really hope that wasn’t the good news.” Ken responded drily as he removed his glasses and rubbed his eyes tiredly.
Mike allowed himself a little smile in response. “There are four ambulances pulled up at the front. I’m guessing, with all the chaos this morning, that at least one of them …”
“still has the keys in them!” Emma finished excitedly.
I pushed past Mike to look for myself. Just as Mike had said, the front of the hospital was full of dull-eyed zombies shambling aimlessly. Two ambulances were stopped randomly in the driveway while another two were parked further away. Trolleys lay overturned and, scattered on the ground, were pieces of a body. Or bodies. A zombie stood nearby, gnawing on a hand. I tried to block out the image as I calculated the difficulty of getting to the nearest ambulance. It was clear that we would have to go right through the zombie horde. Shiiiiitte.
I met Mike’s deadpan expression as I drew back slowly. “What do you think, ma’am?”
“Piece of cake.” Even to me, my voice sounded strangled.
His lips quirked momentarily. “Our options appear pretty limited. We can head down the other way and hope to find a vehicle with keys there or we can make a run for one of these ambulances.”
“Jesus!” Roy exclaimed incredulously, if softly. “How is that even an option? We try the other way, of course!”
I shook my head determinedly, holding Mike’s bland gaze. “We know that zombies are pretty slow moving. True, if we all tried to run through that crowd, the chances are that most of us wouldn’t make it. But one or two fast people could dodge them and make it to the ambulances. Then they could pick up the others.”
“Sounds like a plan.” Mike agreed slowly.
“Like hell it does!” Roy replied vehemently. “Like hell I’m going to run towards any frigging zombies! You’re crazy!” He looked around him for support. “Am I right? It’s lunacy!”
Emma rolled her eyes but her normally rosy complexion had paled considerably. “You really think we have a chance
?”
I swallowed hard and nodded. I couldn’t believe I was even contemplating running through a crowd of zombies but I had to be the one behind the wheel. It was the only way to be sure of finding Michele. What if the others didn’t want to go rescue her? What if they had families of their own they wanted to help? I had to be in control of the vehicle so I could make the call.
Putting up a shaky hand, I said, “I’m not the fastest runner around but I am pretty good at dodging and weaving.” I smiled weakly. “Years of playing touch footy with the guys.”
Emma looked petrified. “Are you sure, Lori?”
No! “I’ve got as good a chance as any of you. Maybe better.”
The contemplative way Mike was looking at me made me feel a little uncomfortable, as if he could read my mind and see the completely selfish reasons I had for volunteering.
“Okay.” He nodded slowly. “You’re only going to get one shot at this, ma’am. If they manage to surround you…”
I bobbed my head jerkily. “I know. And for goodness sakes, call me Lori.” Sweat dripped down my spine as my breath quickened.
A movement to my side caught my eye and I was mortified to realise that I had forgotten about Jessie. Kneeling, I took her hands in mine and tried to smile confidently.
“I’m going to be back with the car in a few minutes, Jessie. You wait with these guys and be ready to jump into the back of the ambulance as soon as I pull up. Alright?”
Her solemn brown eyes took in my whole face. I had the unnerving feeling that she thought it was the last time she would see me. She nodded and squeezed my hands. “You have to run really fast, okay?”
I smiled. “Like my butt is on fire!”
She grinned back at me - I guess she was familiar with the expression - and then moved back to Emma’s side. I stood up and took a deep breath. “Okay, let’s do this.”
The City