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Stop the Sirens: Sirens of the Zombie Apocalypse, Book 3

Page 33

by Isherwood, E. E.


  There were so many things going on at once Liam could hardly keep up. A Scout in the back shouted a warning that the infected now poured through the ballpark gate—they were following the MRAP like hungry Piranha to a ham hock. Phil said he saw people in the stands surging for the aircraft too. Ahead, the Marines holding back the crowd turned uncertainly as they had threats in every direction. Getting surrounded wasn't what it used to be...

  Liam thought the thought, “At least no one is shooting,” just as a shot rang out.

  The ballpark exploded in gunfire.

  In the rear of his truck, men and boys shot at the zombies who had reached the truck. Mel had swerved right as she drove into the stadium, but many of the zombies made a z-line for the noisy Ospreys rather than follow her. The MRAP and the fastest zombies arrived at the 1st base Osprey at almost the same time. The Marines defended their patch of dirt, but diluted themselves to absurdity in the face of so many hostiles.

  “What do we do now?” Liam asked the crew cabin.

  Mel turned off the engine and turned to him with a grim smile and a raised eyebrow. “We pray.”

  He took that as his cue to backtrack to Grandma and get her out of the rear door along with everyone else. He hunched over as he made his way to her. The men and Scouts needed no invitation; they charged out the back. The four of them formed a loose firing line just behind the truck so they could shoot the incoming zombies. They looked tiny in the face of the ever growing crowd of infected coming through the broken rear gate of the ballpark.

  “We did this,” Liam thought. “We brought down this sanctuary.” There's always someone who ruins it for the others. Liam assigned the name THAT GUY to the bumbling character from all the zombie books he'd read over the years.

  THAT GUY who bungles holding a key to get him into his sanctuary.

  THAT GUY who shoots so many zombies he creates a stack of them, allowing them to walk onto his otherwise safe railway car.

  THAT GUY who needlessly brags to CDC employees that his Grandma is 104 so they spend the next week hunting her down.

  The examples were legion, yet the three he'd just imagined were from his own experience in the Zombie Apocalypse to date. “Yep, that's all me. My streak continues,” he mused.

  Liam watched the handful of Scouts and men outside and recognized he had to move fast. He grabbed Grandma's arm, thankful that for once she didn't argue with him. She had a penchant for asking him to leave her behind and save himself, but she likely had heard Liam demur so many times she knew not to ask again.

  The gunfire outside was incessant. When he and Victoria had Grandma on the dirt, he could see the fighting was more serious than he'd imagined. The crowd of civilians converged on the thin line of Marines—and weren't stopping, even in the face of gunfire. In fact, they were firing back. Several of the Marines fell as he guided Grandma to the Osprey. There was no one standing on the ramp so they just kept going. Several of the people they rescued from the TV station had jumped off the roof and were also running in. They moved with grim determination as far into the plane as they could, as if nothing was going to stop them from reaching safety. He doubted even the Marines could dislodge them.

  He put Grandma on one of the jump seats near the middle of the plane and motioned for Victoria to strap her in. Someone in charge had to be on the plane. He walked by the eight or ten men and women who had taken refuge in the leading seats and stepped from the cargo area into the cockpit. Two Marine aviators sat in front of a dizzying array of buttons, switches, and display panels. The man on the right had a pistol pointed at his chest.

  “I'm unarmed!” he shouted.

  “What do you want? How'd you get on board?”

  Liam thought it was obvious. “Your door was wide open,” is what he should have said. Now wasn't the time for jokes. Instead, he played his only card in this rigged poker game called the apocalypse.

  “I'm here to see colonel Brandyweis. He's the commander of 2nd Marines...or something.” He'd met the colonel, but he couldn't recall the man's unit. He was only half-sure of his rank. He continued, talking fast. “I'm here with some Boy Scouts and my elderly grandmother. The colonel was looking for her.” That was mostly true. The colonel was looking for her as a key to finding the real fugitive: Douglas Hayes of the CDC.

  The co-pilot looked at him for a long moment, then lowered his weapon.

  “The lieutenant colonel isn't here. Go back and take a seat and I'll contact him. If you're lying I'll throw you off myself. Clear?”

  Liam had seen enough war movies to know the proper response: “Crystal, sir.” He thought about throwing him a salute, but opted for restraint. He trotted back to the large cargo hold. Grandma and Victoria were secure and belted, but the other men and boys were still at the bottom of the ramp, firing and reloading as fast as they could.

  He proceeded to the top of the ramp, and squatted down so he could see through the gap in the bay door. Hundreds of infected were on the green turf, walking and speed-walking toward the planes. On the other side, Marines were falling back to the planes, downing civilians who were doing their best to get themselves shot. Liam recognized the desperation in their eyes.

  The Marines were doomed. Opportunities for cooperation, and survival, had passed. The civilians would overrun the plane and make it so overburdened it wouldn't be able to take off. That's how the story ends...

  He was in the process of turning around to go back to Grandma when something caught his attention on the top of the MRAP. Someone was still alive up there, but wasn't coming down.

  “Ugg, that just figures,” he thought. Once he saw the person, he couldn't look away. He judged his chances, ignored them, and ran anyway. Victoria screamed his name behind him, overpowering the engine noise, but he couldn't listen to her. He plowed through the small cordon of AR-15-wielding Boy Scouts, unaware until it was much too late he didn't inform them he was coming through. He waited to be shot in the back, but was pleasantly surprised when he wasn't.

  He judged his distance, speed, and destination and timed his jump perfectly. Getting on top of his MRAP wasn't that difficult because the thing had numerous appendages, grills, and guards on the side which facilitated his climb. He mounted the rig just in front of the driver's side door, pulled himself onto the top part of the hood—away from all the blood—then hopped over the windshield to the somewhat flat surface on top. He got around the automated chaingun, disheartened by all the blood on top—that was blood from survivors hurting each other to get their ride on his truck. He took two seconds to see the crowds on both sides of him eating away the Marines by sheer force of numbers. He didn't have long.

  An older teenaged black girl was prone on the metal surface. Her white blouse carried the typical apocalyptic grime of someone who had worn it for too long. Her long black slacks were shredded below the knees and similarly filthy. Her exposed lower legs were lacerated with what looked like a 1000 scratches. Her arms were also smeared with blood from numerous injuries. When he bent down to let her know he was there, she turned her face toward him and it too was blood-strewn. But she was alive.

  He said nothing, but grabbed her hand and pulled her from the deck. She let him lead her, though she was in a daze. The smell of gunfire was powerful. Clouds of it were everywhere below him, adding to his own wooziness within the chaos.

  Still saying nothing, he pulled her forward, and motioned where he wanted her to go. She gave a weak smile and drug herself toward him as he stood on the hood and beckoned her.

  “That's right. Just follow me down. We're going to get on the plane.”

  She looked terrified. A perfectly natural emotion given what she'd just been through. He corrected himself. She was still going through it. He took another look around, felt the crush of time, but knew he couldn't show it to her.

  He tried to convey hope instead. “The Marines are here to save us.”

  A thousand thoughts swirled through his head. His mind landed on a sour one. He expected her to re
spond with, “And who will save the Marines?” but she remained quiet.

  He held her hand as she shimmied down the windshield, and he turned to put his foot on the fender so he could step there. He let himself get distracted by the action below and he slipped on the blood covering the lower half of the hood.

  His vision accelerated as she spun.

  He became aware of himself seconds later. He opened his eyes while lying in the dirt. Victoria was in his field of vision, running to him. Another woman ran the other way. He recognized her from somewhere.

  “Victoria, sweet Victoria,” he thought. “Are we going for a plane ride?”

  A zombie jumped into his field of view. It ran up the ramp, but was shot by a soldier at the top.

  “Not a soldier. That's a US Marine,” he heard from deep in his memories.

  Screams from behind. Some Boy Scouts ran right by him. One looked back at him with terror in his eyes.

  “How nice to have them here,” he thought.

  “I wonder what game they're playing?” His mind was adrift.

  He next became aware of himself sitting in one of the Osprey's seats. More gunfire. He was surrounded by many desperate-looking people. “Wow, they look like their late for work,” he joked with himself.

  The already whining engines pitched faster. The plane lurched.

  From his left he heard a swell of gunfire and watched with placid calmness as the Marines shot everyone they could from the ramp of their plane. The noise was deafening, but Liam wasn't bothered.

  “EVERYONE GET DOWN!” shouted one of the Marines over the roar of the accelerating engines. Most complied. He physically encouraged the few holdouts.

  With everyone off their feet, Liam had a clear view of the other Osprey. It still had its ramp open too but no one was shooting, and a massive crowd tried to get in from the infield side of the baseball diamond. Another group was on the outfield side of the ramp and they pressed in too.

  “Isn't this nice,” he thought. “I loved coming to the ballpark with Dad.”

  In slow motion the other Osprey lifted off, ramp open and all, and tilted dangerously to the left. People clung to the ramp even as it lifted several feet above the crowd. It was too much.

  “Any old fool can see that,” he laughed to himself.

  The Osprey continued to tilt and move forward at the same time. It snapped the nets behind home plate and tried to correct itself, but it was too unwieldy. It drifted into the box seats above third base, and seemed to settle itself onto the incline of seats. Liam waited for an explosion that never came.

  “Nothing is ever like the movies,” he complained.

  The Marines continued to shoot both the living and the dead at the end of his bird's ramp. It began to close. Before it got too high Liam had the misfortune to see a man throw his tiny daughter in the air toward the Marines, only to have her pulled down by an incredibly lucky zombie who had his arm above his head as he too reached for the ramp.

  “He whiffed it,” was his in-game analysis. “I feel ya' buddy.”

  The whole plane rattled maniacally, then seemed to settle as it rose. In sixty seconds Liam appreciated they were alive, and hovering. His head cleared, though his confused ramblings were gradually replaced by a similarly disconcerting din of screaming, shouting, and wailing from inside the now-cramped cargo hold.

  A grim-faced Marine covered in red blotches on his grey camo walked by. He looked at everyone in the seats as he picked his way through those sitting on the floor. Liam couldn't read his face, but thought he saw anger in his eyes.

  He turned to Victoria in the seat to his right and was surprised to see the shock on her face as she looked at him.

  “Liam! You fell and hit your head!”

  “I fell and hit my head?” he mouthed back.

  She nodded vigorously.

  “Just rest!” she screamed.

  He reclined his head on the seat. The Marines shouted at the civilians. The civilians shouted at the Marines and each other. Children—many parentless—wailed relentlessly, as was their right. No one showed the least inclination to heed to sanity.

  He leaned forward and over to Grandma, “Hey Grandma, you forgot your cane. You want me to turn the plane around to go get it?” He smiled as he said it, unsure if she even heard him. Ignoring the shaking hand, he used two fingers to wipe at the blood dripping into his eye, then he crushed himself into the back of his seat to steady his body. He'd said it as a joke. He left her cane back when they first left her house. He turned around to retrieve it for her; it was among the first of their many trials together. At the time he had no idea how many adventures they'd have together. Now he was safe inside a military plane, above a city filled with zombies, while thousands of abandoned survivors below cursed him for being so damned lucky.

  The ballpark, home to so many friendly competitions over the years, was now witness to the ultimate struggle between the diminishing number of healthy humans and the increasing number of infected. He saw it as a microcosm of what was happening in the whole city, the whole country, and the whole world.

  “Ms. Bunting would be so happy to know I remembered what a microcosm is.” He giggled to himself as his head swooned. His science teacher was probably de—

  “No! She made it. They all made it,” he thought. “Everyone I ever knew made it to safety, until I'm proven wrong.” He didn't want to go crazy thinking of all the people who potentially didn't make it. Someone had to make it.

  Somehow, he won the lottery again and was one of the survivors.

  He agreed with those below: at that moment he really was the luckiest boy in the world.

  ###

  Thank you for reading this short sample of Last Fight of the Valkyries. I hope you'll consider signing up to my mailing list so you can be informed when the book is released. I'm shooting for May 2016.

  Sign up at:

  ZOMBIEBOOKS.NET

  Here's a quick summary of the second trilogy. I'm calling it the Valkyries of the Zombie Apocalypse series, to keep it in line with the titling of my previous trilogy, Sirens of the Zombie Apocalypse.

  Book 1: Last Fight of the Valkyries. Grandma finally gets to rest, but things only get more hectic for Liam and Victoria. While the “professionals” in camp are off doing the stuff of day-to-day survival, the kids take it upon themselves to do the far more important work of saving the world. They begin by exploring a deep pit mine where they've been told they'd find the answers they seek. Three young women fall into their lives, and none of them are at all what they seem. At least, that's what Grandma says. She saw them all in her dreams.

  Book 2: Mile 444. With new leads to deeper secrets of the zombie plague, Liam and Victoria head across the country to find the wife of Colonel McMurphy and deliver his data. But weeks after the plague wiped order off the map, crossing the expanse of Kansas is a job only for the fearless. Grandma remains in her new home, but continues her mental battle with a cagey visitor in her head that seldom gives her the full story. As more young people stumble into camp, she begins to guess why.

  Book 3: Zombies Ever After. Liam and Victoria find no welcome in the Mile-Hi city and are keen to reach the other side of the Rocky Mountains to complete their journey. A thousand miles from their matriarch, they learn why Grandma Marty was resistant to the infection, why she has her dreams, and why the zombie plague is never going to end. But the answers come at a cost. A remote town in Colorado becomes the epicenter of the escalating conflict between a government stuck on accelerating the infection, and a population trying to end it. With the threat of war, Liam's faith in a brighter tomorrow is tested. All the way to the end.

  Acknowledgments

  This series has been a labor of love in so many ways. When I sat down at my keyboard and started the first book I had no idea if I could even get through the first chapter, much less the whole book. Writing a novel was a difficult endeavor only “professional” authors could master. Or so I thought.

  In the summer of 2
014, on the day of the funeral for my 104-year-old grandmother, my sister mentioned she was writing a book. We discussed a few points about her challenges, when she planned to publish, and other details that at the time seemed innocuous. However, I was inspired by that conversation to spin up a short story based on an elderly woman living in a house with her nurse. I called it “104” because of the age of the protagonist. The story was a celebration of the spirit of my grandma and it helped me find something positive in that dark day.

  But I wasn't done yet. I was so inspired I just kept writing. “104” became chapter one of book one. I dubbed it “CIV,” which coincidentally was the Roman numeral for 104. It was the first of many coincidences I found while writing the stories, and the nature of coincidence fascinated me throughout the series. I didn't notice until well into book 2 that Aloysius used his nickname “Al” while inside Marty's head. His role with computers seems appropriate for a computer program, or AI if you prefer. Did that realization guide my writing down different pathways? You see, even an author doesn't always know where his creation will take him...

  This series of books did take me into the publishing world, and for that I'm thankful my sister nudged me in the right direction. I'm also grateful for my grandmother and all the things she did to encourage generations of our family to seek the light. Maybe she is in a room somewhere with a rickety 8088 computer, making things happen in this corner of the multiverse? How many coincidences had to happen for me to be sitting there on that exact day, having a discussion about writing books with the exact person I needed, and then finding inspiration to write three books with a central character based loosely on her? Was it providence? Luck? Or was it always going to happen?

  I want to thank every reader who came through the series, or just read this last book. As a writer there is no greater honor than knowing someone thought enough of my idea to take time out of their busy lives to step into my imagination for so many hours. It doesn't escape my notice that an author can get the near-undivided attention of a reader for periods far longer than many TV personalities and entertainers, including most politicians. This is what drives me to become a better writer, build more creative stories, and make my worlds as interesting and thought-provoking as possible. There are so many great authors out there—a multiverse of them! I'm eternally grateful you chose to visit my tiny waterfall.

 

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