by Alan Spencer
“Fire three!”
“Fire four!
“Fire five!”
Phoop! Phoop! Phoop! Phoop!
The courtyard was obscured in billowing clouds of thick white.
Now the serious firepower.
He hurled three incendiary grenades, chucking them like baseballs. The ground below was animated with flying sparks, wildfire breaking out as bursts of explosions rocked the courtyard. Chunks of concrete and rock spit forth so high they smacked near his window, pelting the building.
Richard couldn’t lug the M-60, so he raised it up to the window and fired at will.
Thup-thack-thup-thack-thup-thack-thup-thack-thup-thack-thup-thack.
The belt ammunition expelled ninety rounds a minute. Behind the veil of white, random pockets of blood burst. Limbs dislocated from bodies, literally blasted off. The fog masked the majority of the damage, though the cacophony of shrieks and bodies dropping encouraged him to keep pulling back the trigger.
Going dry, he changed belts and continued the sniper rampage. He didn’t have much time to run. Hordes of them were already charging into the building hell bent to snuff the shooter.
The new belt went dry after minutes of firing. He charged out of the room carrying the backpack and an M-16 in each hand. He was armed with two incendiary grenades and three more shots of tear gas. He strapped on the gas mask, knowing what he had to do.
First he shot a can of tear gas down the hall.
Phoop!
The elevator was ticking up to the third floor. At the fire exit, he could hear numerous feet pounding to reach him. In seconds, they’d arrive.
The stairs are a trap. But so is the elevator.
I don’t have a choice here!
He raced through the haze of smoke. He crouched beside the elevator, waiting for it to open.
Ding.
The monsters filtered out, a pack of wolves spewing forth. They charged into the smoke, mewling, barking, bashing and stomping in search of him.
Through the smoke, he easily dodged the wolves and sprinted to the elevator. He struck the button for the ground floor. The almond slits turned to him, shining the amber orange of a hoot owl’s. They charged back at him. He opened fire. The M-16 blasted off muzzles, destroying limbs and legs, and turned their bodies into red mush. Before the elevator could close, a face stuck into the elevator. Warm froth flew at Richard as the beast gnashed its teeth and tried to reach deeper into the elevator. It was about to pull the doors open when Richard stuck the gun muzzle into its mouth and unleashed a rip-roaring tide of ammunition. The eyes lit up a caustic yellow, the back of the head erupting into soft pieces.
He kicked the corpse out and shouted, “Stay the fuck out!”
The door closed. He sagged against the backmost wall, out of breath. Wolf blood dripped down the muzzle of the M-16.
He removed another grenade from his backpack and reloaded a fresh clip into the M-16. He was a sitting duck, he thought. If they breached the elevator’s threshold, he was as good as dead.
That’s why he gasped when the elevator stopped on level two.
“Shit!”
He unstrapped the second M-16 and helmed a machine gun in each hand. He placed the grenade between his feet, thinking of a strange plan.
Ding.
He fumbled to clutch both guns and knelt into firing position. The doors opened. His fingers arched over both triggers.
Long, white, slender fingers matched with three-inch nails pushed the doors open sooner. The green bars in oil-black eyes and the red bars in oil-black eyes both flashed as male and female vampires pushed, shoved and combated each other in their bloodlust to devour him.
He was stunned at the show of violence the first onslaught of machine gun fire accomplished. Jaws were unhinged and rendered into brittle pieces. Noses were removed, vanishing at blink’s speed, the nasal cavities broken well beyond the skull, their faces literally evaporating into pink mist and ribbons of singed flesh. Heads were removed from necks after being punctured by dozens of shots, the arteries spitting precious loads of red onto their brethren.
Again, the guns went dry. He scrambled to kick, lift, heave, drag and clear the way so the elevator could close unobstructed.
A new wave was coming in, most of them smart enough to seek cover and wait for his ammunition to be exhausted.
He hurled the grenade wedged between his feet after pulling the pin. It rolled down the hallway, and on the fourth bounce, a vampire picked it up. It was about to throw it back his way when the hot potato combusted, setting three-quarters of the hallway ablaze.
Ka-boom!
Bodies were shot up against the wall, literally heaved and chopped up by shrapnel and pure force. A screen of blue-gray smoke was coming in at him.
The elevator was closing.
Reloaded, he had filled the elevator with shell casings, surrounding him like golden casualties. Taking stock of his weapons, he was on his final clip with each gun. He wouldn’t have enough firepower to endure another fleet on the floor below. He gazed down the hall, the vampires wading through fires and limp corpses to reach him again. He didn’t learn why the elevator hadn’t closed until he peered down at the random zombie head blocking the doors. The doors kept trying to breach the obstruction, but they couldn’t break the head.
He kicked at it, trying to dislodge it.
“Hraaaaaaaah!” A female vampire stuck her face into the elevator. Pure reaction, he punched her on the nose and sent her reeling backward into a circle of fire. She thrashed, shrieking, mewling, melting and disintegrating. More of the charred vampires recovered from the damage. They ambled to the elevator in staggering numbers.
He backed up and punted the zombie’s head from the ground. His foot went through the face and out the back, but the skull remained wedged in place. He wriggled his foot, shaking off the brains and squelched eyeballs. “Damn you! Damn you! Goddamn you!”
He stamped and squashed the pieces through the elevator’s slit until the mess was shoved down into the elevator pit.
The elevator closed abruptly.
Make a plan.
When those doors open, you run like hell and mow whatever’s in your path down until you run dry.
The doors opened too soon. Smoke-filled halls met his entrance. He couldn’t spot any monsters, though he could hear them: a light snarl, the clopping of bare feet against tile, the flensing of flesh against bone, and the pitiful call of the dying in agony. He trod carefully, considering every square inch of tile was blood drenched or obstructed by a dead torso. A wolf’s mane was matted in red, eight zombies dismantling the felled creature and enjoying the hearty meal. They didn’t stir as he passed, entranced by the prospects wetting their hands and filling their mouths.
Once dead, they share no allegiance with each other.
He snuck into the courtyard. He crouched on his knees and unzipped his backpack. He shot the rest of the tear gas, blinding his path in new walls of smoke. Stepping out farther, he saw the volleyball court was littered with dead human bodies in the form of ravaged, bloody shells. The swimming pool down the way was pink with blood, many corpses bobbing on the surface, limp and very dead. The storage sheds were on fire, burning to kindling with nobody to put them out. He wondered if anybody in the distance would observe the black smoke carrying up to the sky.
In fifty years, nobody’s happened upon this place. Why would they now?
He could hear the majority of the monsters shuffle about the building, searching for him. They were coming after him, wising up, as wolfish shrieks and high-pitched calls of the vampires warned him of their coming. He ran full force toward the med building, knowing time was short. When he pushed the door, it was locked.
They didn’t fucking unlock it!
He had a key in a twenty -key set, and he began checking them with trembling hands. He spotted the gold key—the only gold key in his collection—and tried it on for size. Luck served him. The door opened, but only partway. It was obstru
cted by a steel shelf behind the door.
“Clear the way. It’s Richard. It’s me!”
He bashed his shoulder into the door, the shelf sturdily in place. He shoved his body into the small crack and forced himself through. He was halfway and stuck. He turned and could see the line of wolves bounding toward him in the distance. Vampires were on their tails, sprinting closer. The zombies lagged behind, but in due time, they’d swarm the med building.
They weren’t supposed to see me. This is all going to fucking shit!
He removed his backpack and abandoned his guns. This time, he fit through easily. He shoved the shelf and gurneys up against the wall, attempting to re-form the barricade. The second he stepped back, the wild pounding, scratching and punching of the barrier began. Running for the back area, he unlocked the steel-reinforced door and secured it behind him. He ran to the next hatch, ignoring the blood and remains on the way. Richard unlocked the final barrier and secured it behind him. When he climbed down the ladder to meet with the others, the monsters were already beating on that final barrier. It wouldn’t be long before they descended upon all of them.
Chapter Forty-Nine
Addey rushed up to Richard and hugged him close, though their embrace was short-lived. Dr. Kasum stood between them. “They’re here! You led them right to us. Now you’re going to get us all killed.”
“I did my best,” Richard replied. “Now we can run for the docks. Keep moving, right? I took out a nice portion of them.”
“Not enough are dead,” Grace bickered, visibly pissed the man was alive and in her company. “You led them here. I say we leave you behind, and we move on.”
Richard spit in her direction. “Just like you left me to die in the wolf arena, huh? You’re a coward. But don’t worry. I’m not going to kill you. I have higher priorities right now. That hatch is pure steel. It’ll hold long enough for us to decide where we want to go next.”
Cynthia stood beside Grace. “I want to keep moving. Who’s game?”
Herman said, “Me too. I’m not boxing myself in.”
“We all are game for staying alive,” Dr. Kasum answered for everybody. “Now let’s move. We have no choice now.”
“How can you be sure they’re not on the docks waiting for us?” Addey challenged them. “There’s nowhere safe.”
“We were safe!” Dr. Kasum exploded. “Then this asshole comes along and ruins it. Thanks for signing my death certificate, pal.”
Dr. Kasum swung a fist feebly at Richard, but Richard tripped the doctor by sweeping him behind the knees. Dr. Kasum crashed into the water of the filtration system, a large, open pool.
“Shit, I didn’t mean to hurt him.”
That’s when the water came alive. It thickened, gurgling and bubbling like a whirlpool cranked to impossible speeds. The surface was covered in a carbonated gelatin that fizzed and popped. Strands of a clotted, clear substance shot out onto the platform one after the other, too numerous to count—hundreds and hundreds of liquid enemies. Cynthia’s legs were wrapped up in the tendrils that snaked up her legs and pulled her down into the water by the head. Herman was next to go, a liquid lasso wrapping around his neck, and then he was plunged beneath the water. Next, a net of liquid fired in three directions, each enshrouding Grace and dragging her into the water.
Addey and Richard took shelter in the control room. The main glass window displayed the scene of carnage. From liquid to solid, the body of water turned alive. A horde of zombies devoured Cynthia, their limbs and teeth tearing away her skin. A wolf chomped down on Dr. Kasum’s neck and chewed up the still-screaming head. Vampires sucked on Dr. Kasum’s stump and punched through his shoulder blades to the heart. Wolves peeled back his ribs and shattered his sternum, barking and shrieking in delight. Herman’s head poked up to the surface, but it was decapitated, bobbing up and down lifelessly. The zombies salvaged what floated on the waters, namely the numerous collections of stringy intestines.
Grace swam violently to evade them. Falling out of the pool and crawling to escape, she reached the outside of the control room, but up from the water, the mudslide of tissue arrived as a large, fleshly mass. Using its nodules, those pulsating discs so alien and powerful, the creature sucked the tissue from her face, patch by peeling patch. Rivulets of blood seeped out the forming cracks of her skin, evaporating into the creature until every ounce of fluid, section of skin and piece of bone had been absorbed across the room in a brilliant show of mobile death.
“Naaaaaaaaaaaaaaah!”
Her scream was finalized when her tongue was uprooted from her mouth and her jaw snapped in one collective theft.
Addey grasped Richard’s shirt. “They were here the entire time, waiting and listening. We can’t defeat them! There’s too many!”
She couldn’t read Richard’s face. He watched in horror and awe as they feasted on the final remains, wading on the water’s surface. Addey paced back and forth, unable to contain her fear. They had no protection, she realized.
They would be next.
Then Richard raced to the control panel, sparked by an idea. His hands worked up and down the panel. He stopped at the red-handled switch above the keyboard panel. “I’ve been here a few times. This filters the water system and turns it into a drinkable source.” Raising his voice, he hollered, “Well, let’s filter the waste!”
He cranked back the red-handled switch. The lights flickered from the power surge. The machine groaned, the floor trembling from the reaction, as if the machine were clearing its throat. That’s when the water was sucked down into the end of the reservoir, rushing fast like an undertow from hell. Blades spun three yards long, breaking up the water. The fleshy mud slick was the first to be shot through, slashed up by twenty industrial-size blades that resembled the propellers of a lawn mower. Wolves were sucked in top-first, minced, diced and pureed. Vampires and zombies haplessly were fired into the death machine, unable to prevent their demise, flailing and issuing infernal death cries. The monsters literally burst upon contact with the collection of killer steel blades slicing at many miles an hour in a show of high-octane disembodiment. A flood of blood was ejected onto the walls, the crimson growing darker and darker with each cycle. The glass plate they watched through was literally doused in red.
Richard turned off the machine five minutes later, satisfied they were all dead. After the muck on the glass pane dripped down enough to see out again, they watched the pink and dark masses of remains float on the surface of the water, but nothing was alive.
She rested against him. “You’re a genius.”
They listened to the pounding from above. The cacophony was a constant. Each monster could be picked out by the range of its voice. How long the hatch would hold them back, she couldn’t know. How many of them remained was also undeterminable.
“We put up a hell of a fight,” Richard said in a strange congratulations. “I still don’t know how you fought off the zombies when you worked on the sublevel.”
“Deke saved me on that one,” she admitted. “Somehow, my brother blew the hatch I discovered in the zombie pit to pieces. I escaped being devoured because of him. He’s more of a brother as a ghost than he was alive. He defended me from the skirt-chasers in high school, but that was the extent of his help.”
“I’m glad he’s not around now—no offense.”
Addey was confused. “How come?”
He wrapped his arms around her and kissed her. She melted into his body, his warmth. This was it, she thought, her final chance at pleasure. They kissed harder, their hands digging into each other’s backs.
Then something nipped her between the shoulder blades. It broke skin and delved deep. Drawing blood.
Richard was as shocked as her. “What the hell was that?”
She gripped her back and her fingertips came back with blood. The flesh wound was teeth marks, the indentions spread out a quarter of an inch apart. He stepped back from her, scared. “Stay back. Don’t come near me…it’s…Brenner in
fected me!”
A projection of pink sinew broke through his wrists and shot at her, biting her neck with its lamprey mouth. Then, satisfied with the taste, it recoiled back into his body. Without being able to run or hide or react, two more escaped his femoral artery and jugular vein and nipped her on both arms. They drew blood, but also injected her. She felt the sting course up her veins and travel throughout her system. It grew significantly hotter in the coming moments. Addey was dizzy and, suffering instant flu-like symptoms, she tipped over against the control panel.
She could barely form the words, “What…what…is this…happening to me?”
Richard was distressed that he couldn’t contain the snake projections.
“I’m so, so sorry,” he babbled to her, his voice going in and out of audibility, her ears malfunctioning. “Brenner had this exact same condition, you see. He was a monster, but none of them have displayed his mutation. He bit me before he died. He must’ve passed it on to me, and then I passed it on to you.”
“But why,” she said, her ears ringing, every word he’d spoken thinned out and tinny. “Why did he do this to you?”
“Wait, wait—I know! He told me I had to survive. That was his advice shortly before he died. Maybe he meant it would take time for the mutation to take hold.”
“My God, Richard, what are you telling me?”
She struggled to stay awake, but she slipped into unconsciousness directly after Richard’s reply. “He wanted us to fight the monsters ourselves.”
Chapter Fifty
After Addey woke up, they climbed up the exit hatch in the back of the control room and arrived at the boarding dock at the south end of the complex. The wooden planks were sun baked and warm to the touch, though the sun was a dying ember on the horizon. They’d waited hours before deciding to go topside, and nightfall would be soon.
Sea salt drifted up to her nostrils, thick and snuffing as a sheet. What also drifted was the concentration of copper and expiring meat, of death on the air. But the essence of blood failed to curl her stomach anymore. Her mouth watered. Her body tightened and quaked. She was growing. Changing. Mutating.