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Sirens of the Zombie Apocalypse (Book 6): Zombies Ever After

Page 17

by E. E. Isherwood


  “No, Mr. Short Guy, I know exactly where the zombies are coming from.”

  She banged on the screwdriver handle, but there was no reaction from the body. He was gone.

  The only good thing the man had done in the short, miserable time she'd known him was to not turn into a zombie. A bullet to the eye and a screwdriver to the ear made sure of that.

  When the dead man rose up from her chest, it took her a few seconds to recognize that Hayes had come down from his refuge, after all. He pulled the guy off.

  “We have to close this gate. They're about to burn the building,” he said as if he were reading a weather report.

  “You saw me on the camera?” she asked dreamily.

  “Yep, that's how I knew to come down here.”

  That's great, but not why I asked. Not at all.

  Chapter 9: Mile 444

  Hayes had to help Victoria through the tunnel and out into the sunlight of the morning. The shock of the assault was bad enough, but the realization she may be infected sent her onto psychological thin ice. Her mind raced as her body ached.

  I must get out of here. Run away.

  The few students she’d seen, plus the men and women at the barricade, were a small glimpse of the total number of survivors within the killing range of a single zombie. Just one was all it would take to wipe everyone off the map. Unable to know for sure if what she’d seen down in the tunnel was the result of her truly being infected, or was simply another strange behavior of the zombie horde, she fell back on her long history of hypochondria. Now that the suggestion was in her head, she was convinced she was infected.

  The sting of daylight didn’t brighten her mood.

  “You all right? Did you get bitten?” Hayes had released her now that they were outside, and somewhat safe, but he seemed to study the blood over her shirt and pants—likely looking for bites.

  She huffed. “I’m fine.” Then, with more grace. “He caught me off guard. I guess I got startled.”

  Hayes stood next to her. “Well, you should be scared. That man was part of an NIS hit team, no doubt about it. They all dress like there’s only one color of clothing.” He handed her the black rifle she'd dropped.

  She didn’t want to admit it, but Hayes probably saved her life. After getting her to her feet, he helped close and lock the gate in the tunnel. He assured her none of the zombies escaped the building, and in fact all of them were at the front windows of all three floors watching a growing throng of students—and security people from the barricade—as they attempted to start a fire.

  They soon watched the action in real time. Sparks and his crew had filled some kind of push cart, and it was burning wildly.

  “They’ll torch the whole place. Zombie problem solved,” he said evenly.

  “It’ll ruin all your research...”

  She was conflicted into silence. On the one hand, the research Hayes had done there was incredible, and could lead to a cure. On the other, clearing the building would be dangerous, and the risk of one of them getting out would only increase if security teams went in looking for trouble.

  The NIS had done their job too well.

  “The man I killed. The shorter guy. Do you know what he was doing in that lower level before I arrived?”

  Surely he wasn’t waiting just for me.

  Or, she thought, that was exactly what someone like him would do. He guessed that’s where she would go next. Did he know Hayes was locked up there?

  Suddenly the conspiracy launched into an infinite regression. Hayes was in on it. He communicated with Short Guy, and they were working together to bring her back so they could take care of her, and the zombies, in one fell swoop.

  Then she remembered that if she was infected—a modern day Typhoid Victoria—she should be put down. Maybe they were trying to do her a favor…

  “Hello? You in there?”

  Victoria came back. “Oh, I’m—sorry, what?”

  “Do you want to watch these guys torch the place, or can we move on?”

  The guys from the barricade weren’t that far away.

  “I need to go tell them thanks. They saved both our lives.”

  “OK. I’ll wait over there,” he pointed to the far end of the parking lot, which was the edge of campus and the beginnings of Forest Park.

  He walked off, leaving her alone in the first rays of sunshine coming in through the tall, stately trees of the campus. She tried to gather her wits as she neared Sparks. The smell of burning paper was on the air.

  “Hey, there she is!” Sparks said with gusto. “Perfect timing. You were short and sweet. So were we.” He pointed to the cart filled with flames. They’d filled it with books.

  “Yeah, I, uh, wanted to tell you I got the man I was looking for. And I—”

  She wanted to say she killed the assassin, but it sounded ridiculous. Like she was some kind of counter-terrorist soldier—which was pretty much the furthest thing from the truth.

  “—found the guy who shot your people. He was attacked by a zombie.”

  Despite the gray lie, the story sounded plausible and served the same purpose, in the end.

  “Ah, that’s good news. We’ll burn his body with all the others.”

  She pawed the rifle strap over her shoulder, and brought it around to her front. “Do you want this back? I fired it at that hitman, but he laughed when I shot him.”

  “No, keep it.” He got close enough to look it over. “That's chambered in .22 caliber.” He laughed. “It looks bad ass, but it won't do much good against Kevlar or the undead. But it's all I can give you.”

  She sighed. Short Guy's gun was lying somewhere in the tunnel...though she was pretty sure it was now on the wrong side of the gate.

  “Thanks,” she said as she pushed it to her back again.

  “I have to go,” she continued. “I need to find my boyfriend, and get my scientist friend another lab,” she pointed to the one they were about to destroy.

  “Lots of space on this campus. You’ll have no problem on that score.”

  She was sure he was right, though he couldn’t know the NIS was already here looking for Hayes. No matter what building he wanted to use for his research, they’d not let him do it.

  Maybe I could do it myself? I could cure myself.

  Her spirits sunk at the recollection she’d momentarily forgotten about that. It would be empowering to think she could research the plague and cure herself and everyone else...but this was reality. She was an amateur bedpan changer, not a medical professional. She needed Hayes, just as much as he apparently needed her.

  She wondered if he would have ever come out of his security room if she’d not found rescue. In another universe she would have been killed by Short Guy, or red dress girl, then she herself could have ended up killing Hayes at some point inside that building.

  Focus on the now, girl. You kept him alive. Go find Liam.

  2

  Hayes watched her approach.

  “You bounce back quick,” he said with a smile.

  “So do you. Did you realize you’d have died if I hadn’t found help? Short Guy was about to close the gate on you. I don’t think anyone would have found you if the zombies had gotten out from that building.”

  “That short guy, as you call him, probably had more years of training in the art of killing than you've been alive. You're one tough chick, I'll give you that.”

  They walked along the road that would take them by the park, the row of mansions, or to the hospitals on the opposite end of Forest Park. She tried to think of the best place to go next, knowing there were people who wanted her dead lurking about.

  The park would take her to Doctor Yu.

  The hospitals might lead her to someone in charge. Someone who could protect her.

  The mansions—Hans' home was there. That's where she figured she'd see Liam if he returned from his task for the old man.

  “Liam would freak out if he saw you and me together.”

  “Is he
the jealous type?” he said with his old egotistical charm.

  “No. Well, I don't know. No!” she sputtered. “I'm talking about you being a crazy researcher who shoots little girls and kidnaps grandparents. That guy.”

  He let her accusations go.

  “He has to know what I'm doing. You have to tell him.”

  She looked at him, rising to the challenge.

  “He and I spent time in a deep mine not far from here. We saw bodies pulled from caskets—dead bodies—that became animated zombies. Care to comment?”

  They walked in silence for a long time. She figured she'd finally cornered him on something important. Her ace card was that she and Liam had gotten a hold of Colonel McMurphy's secret videos showing his discoveries of the place, but that wasn't her secret to reveal. Not to Hayes.

  “How did you guys get down there?”

  “Does it matter?”

  “No, I suppose not.” He laughed in a guarded fashion. “I'm going to take a guess here and say that someone knows you've been down there. Someone in the NIS?”

  She searched her memories. They had no encounters with the NIS while in the mine. At least, no one advertised themselves as such. The three men who claimed to be Polar Bears were left behind in the tank room. They knew. Whoever communicated over the computer link knew. The three missing girls knew. Lots of people knew.

  “Uh huh. I'll take it by your silence that it wasn't a complete secret.”

  Hayes walked to stand under one of the large trees that lined the avenue. He looked around like he was about to share a secret, then spoke in a low voice. “The Mile 444 Project isn't something I was involved in directly, but I knew about it because of its implications for finding a cure. If you could reanimate the dead, imagine what you could do for the sick, right?”

  He rubbed his hands like he was cold. “Before the sirens, a discovery was made out in Colorado. Something that suggested the disease circling the planet was more than we were led to believe. We later came to understand it changes to meet the unique characteristics of localities where it spreads. Thus, Chicago zombies have a version of the disease that is very different from those in Colorado. A sick person in Utah is going to be unrecognizable to a zombie in Uganda. It isn't surprising, given local foods, local customs, minerals in the drinking water, and so forth. But what really surprised us is that the disease could affect dead flesh and bones.”

  With a nod, his voice became a whisper. “The service men and women they dug up down there were supposed to be used for testing, but once the NIS mission changed from causing the infection to making it as bad as possible, they started to dig up more and more bodies. What they did with them, I have no idea.”

  “There are hundreds of them down in that mine.”

  “Then you need to stay far away.”

  “Oh, I'm never going back down there. Don't you worry.”

  With a little less discretion, Hayes spoke louder. “I had nothing to do with all that, though I wish I could get my hands on some of that reanimated blood. It might give us further clues in how the disease is spreading, and how it stays virulent in decaying bodies.”

  “Good luck with that,” she said as she began walking once more.

  Hayes jogged a few paces to catch up. “You know, I could use your help. I need to find a new lab, but I'll need help when I get there. It's just me, now. You could be a real asset.”

  She'd come full circle. Her whole purpose—most of her purpose—of staying behind was to see if she help Doctor Yu and others with the effort to formulate a cure. When they'd arrived, and given Yu and her boss new information about what they'd learned on their journey, she thought for sure that was the beginning of the end. The time when real scientists and doctors got to work to solve the whole thing.

  But the truth was much different. The research on the cure was being done by the one man she'd hoped never to see again. To her chagrin, he'd made real discoveries. He'd given everyone a legitimate lead toward a final cure.

  She had to trust him to continue that research, in the open. If he made off to a secret base again, he might find the cure, but who knows how he'd use it when the time came to share it with the world. Her trust issues wouldn't let her ignore the possibilities.

  “There's a house, just up ahead, where we might find Liam.”

  The first step, once again, was to find her partner. She wanted to have multiple eyes on Hayes, and together the two of them could ensure Doctor Cure didn't run off again.

  She also admitted the need to stay close to the one man who might be able to cure her own infection.

  3

  Hayes walked the street with a type of giddiness.

  “Why the heck are you so happy?”

  “Oh, it feels good to be partnered with someone again. You have no idea—well, you have some idea—what it's like to get on the NIS's bad side.”

  “Yeah, they put your whole family on a kill list, isn't that right?” They both knew of the existence of the secret list of Liam's family members. All of whom had been designated as enemies of the state.

  “True. But now that world is dead, my own family's chances are about the same as everyone else's. Even though I'm technically a traitor to the cause, the odds of them finding my entire family and terminating them is very low. Some of them are already fighting back.”

  Victoria sighed. “I don't understand you people at all. You fight. You connive. You betray.”

  “Just like every other group of humans on the planet. For all their bravado and careful planning, they couldn't factor out human nature. Sometimes people do the exact opposite of what you and I think they should. Even on super secret committees and hit teams. But make no mistake. There are true believers. They would sell out their own children to protect the cause.”

  “And what is...the cause,” she said dramatically.

  “The continuation of mankind, of course.”

  “What? No. It can't be that simple. This has to be about power. Money. Something important.”

  “All that is part of it. A necessary component. But that isn't why these people spend their lives in pursuit of their goals. It is much simpler. It is the most basic thing in existence. They want their families to go on forever.”

  Victoria stopped in the middle of the empty street. “I don't believe you. They're killing everyone on Earth! If their goal was long life, they'd have built hospitals, conducted research, trained doctors and scientists. You know, the stuff that keeps people alive,” she said hotly.

  “You're right of course. That was their goal, for many decades. They had a hand in many of the important scientific discoveries of the last fifty years. But this new crisis hit them like a freight train. They had no way to head it off. They—”

  He looked around.

  “—I was there when all this began. I already told you my role. I helped the President release the plague on those marchers. I thought I was protecting humanity—protecting the institutions which had the most hope of doing exactly what I just said.” He paused.

  “But it got out of hand.”

  “Yes, the plague was already loose, overseas. My innocuous virus helped spread it across America, much faster than it might have otherwise. But it was always coming. And once the NIS knew this, they enacted their own plans to protect themselves, and their families, at the expense of everyone else. They stripped the treasury. Promoted and demoted the right people. They even tolerated my research until they realized my priorities had changed. I was unwilling to do whatever it took to protect the cause.”

  “So you're hated because you want to cure everyone, and not just those they deem important?”

  He touched his nose, signifying she was right.

  She went back and forth over who the NIS hated more. Her and Liam, or Hayes. She was leaning toward Hayes.

  “Up ahead is a house of an old man. He, uh, was someone I drew blood from because of his age. We kind of made a base there, rather than hang out in the park.”

  “Or y
our dorm room,” he said with a knowing smile.

  “Or my dorm room, you perv.” She did not return the smile.

  “So what's his deal? He like Grandma Marty?”

  “He's...interesting.” It was all she could say without revealing the truth.

  “Let's go meet him. We can grab Liam and go.”

  She wondered where he intended to go, but saved that for later. As they walked up the front path of the big home, she unslung her rifle and tried to look like she knew what she was doing. She thumbed the safety, though it was already in the “hot” position. She hadn't given a thought to safety since she'd taken the rifle.

  “The last time we knocked on the door he fired a gun at us,” she said with no humor.

  “Maybe I'll wait over here,” he said as he walked off to the side.

  Fine.

  “Hello? Mr. Grubmeyer? I'm picking up Liam.” She wished it to be true.

  She repeated herself at the bottom of the steps to his front stoop.

  “Don't shoot,” she called out.

  After a few long seconds, she moved a few steps up and repeated herself. In time she was at the door.

  The heavy wooden door had a large metal handle, which she assumed was locked. She gave it a tentative push and felt the door open a couple of inches. She let go and froze.

  “Mr. Grubmeyer?”

  A long pause.

  She turned back to Hayes, standing nearby in the yard. “I'm going in. I have to.”

  “Knock yourself out. Let me know what you find,” he said with a smile.

  I'll be the man. Again.

  The door swung in gracefully. As expected, the front room was filled with boxes of supplies. The place looked like a loading dock. Wooden crates were stacked to the ceiling. Every inch of the floor had supplies, leaving very little space in the middle for a couple of chairs. Hallways led to the back of the house and to the stairwell. She knew the place well, but the silence was eerie.

  She backed to the front door, swung it all the way open, the looked for Hayes. He'd moved closer and was at the foot of the steps.

  “I don't see anyone inside. Will you come in? It's creepy.”

 

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