Genre: Horror (Zombies)
RABID
By
Daniel Skye
PART
ONE: Z DAY
Remember all that sudden panic
back in 2012? Don’t ask me what all the fuss was about. Something to do with
the Mesoamerican Long Count calendar. Oh, I remember what it was now.
The Mayan civilization had accurately
predicted the end of the world. Wait, is that correct? I think I’ve got the
story all screwed up.
Okay, I’ve got it this time. December
21, 2012 marked the end of a cycle in the Mesoamerican calendar, a cycle that
lasted over five thousand years.
It was theorized that this date
marked an era of change, transition. Some people chose to take this as a grim sign
of things to come. The Internet certainly contributed to this factor. Word
spread from one paranoid conspiracy theorist to the next. Of course, it led to
nothing but speculation and conjecture. But it still got people’s attention.
Next thing you know, every
Cheeto-eating blogger and their mother were talking about the end of the world.
It was nothing more than a bunch of wild theories and Internet hyperbole. But
with everyone bouncing their eschatological theories back and forth, people
actually started buying into it. They began to fear the end was nigh.
Hell, they even made a movie
about it. Leave it to Hollywood to capitalize and find a way to profit off
genuine fear. And when December 21, 2012 came and went, everyone who bought
into all those wild theories were overwhelmed with relief.
If Mayans truly intended to
predict the end of the world, they were off by approximately one year.
The world didn’t end in 2012.
Our expiration date came on Friday, September 13, 2013.
And it didn’t end with planes
falling from the sky or the ground crumbling beneath our feet. It wasn’t
nuclear war that did us in. Our planet wasn’t sucked into a black hole. We
didn’t collide with the planet Nibiru.
No one could have anticipated
this disaster. Our end came at the hands of a pernicious plague; a plague of a
synthetic origin. It was a global catastrophe. The virus–both airborne and blood
borne–was released into the atmosphere, triggering a series of events that led
to the collapse of civilization.
Those that died…well, let’s just
say they didn’t stay dead for long. Events escalated precipitously. The
military was called in to contain the situation. But the virus was spreading at
an exponential rate. We were all infected. We all carried it. There was no
containing it, no controlling it. This was the dawn of the apocalypse.
And the world went out with a
whisper instead of a bang.
* * *
Friday, September 13, 2013.
Merrick, New York
Jackson Creed was bored out of
his skull. He craved action, excitement. Any distraction or diversion would
have appeased him, so long as it alleviated the banality of reality.
A grease fire. A surprise visit
from the health inspector. An unruly customer complaining about an undercooked or
overcooked steak. He wished for anything that would snap him out of this funk.
Working as a short-order cook
paid the bills, but it didn’t provide Jax the jolt of adrenaline he needed. Jax
was a thrill seeker. He had served his time in the military, and when they
shipped him home, Jax was lost. He had no guidance, no sense of purpose. He still
hadn’t found his true calling. But he knew he wasn’t put on this earth to slave
over a hot grill all day in his chef whites.
Jax, who was busy daydreaming
about a better life as he flipped burgers on the grill, snapped out of it when
he heard an unmistakable sound.
The screams were distant and
brief, but it was enough to gain his attention. The screams were followed by
police sirens, which were followed by more ear-piercing screams. And suddenly,
Jax wasn’t the least bit bored.
* * *
Manhattan, New York.
“SLATER!” Francis Laymon
screamed across the room. “IN MY OFFICE, A-SAP!”
Ryan Slater sighed as he slid his
chair out from under his desk. The walk to Laymon’s office was twenty steps,
but to Slater, it felt like the death march that a condemned prisoner takes
before his execution.
“Yes, Mr. Laymon?” Ryan asked,
poking his head into Laymon’s office. He hated calling him Mr. Laymon. He was a
cop for ten years. Worked vice, homicide. Now he was taking orders from a gruff
prick like Francis Laymon.
“You’ve heard about what’s going
on in Long Island?”
“Yes, sir. Twenty-four dead,
seventy-three ill. They’re saying it’s some kind of super-virus.”
“That’s right. And I need you
out there covering the story.”
“I thought that was Johnson’s
assignment.”
“Yeah well, Johnson came down
with a bad case of dysentery. He’s not going anywhere for the next few days
unless he glues his ass cheeks shut.”
“With all due respect, sir, I
have a ton of assignments to finish here. And there are plenty of people in
this office who are far more qualified than I am.”
“I don’t want to hear your
troubles, Slater. I’ve got one kid in college, a daughter who needs braces, and
a brother-in-law suffering from boantrophy.”
“What-in-thropy?”
“Boantrophy. He thinks he’s a
fucking cow. Just walks around on all fours, eating grass all day long.”
“At least he hasn’t tried milking
himself,” Ryan quipped.
“He actually has,” Laymon
assured him. “It’s not a pretty sight. Now what the hell are you still doing
here? Shouldn’t you be on a bus or a train to Long Island? Chop-chop. I’m not
paying you to dick around all day. I could pay my brother-in-law for that. You
want that? You want to be replaced by a guy who thinks he’s a fucking cow?”
“No, sir,” Ryan said through
gritted teeth. “I’ll get right on it.”
* * *
Wantagh, New York
Brenda Barker was sitting in
some pretentious café, sipping on a foam latte when duty called and she sprang
into action. An elderly gentleman had collapsed outside on the pavement and
Brenda rushed to his aid. He was sprawled out on the sidewalk, clutching at his
chest.
The barista was phoning 911 for
an ambulance as several patrons gathered outside to witness Brenda’s heroic
actions. Brenda was a registered nurse and she’d seen plenty of heart attack
victims in her line of work. Unfortunately, on this occasion, her intervention
was futile. The heart attack proved to be fatal and in less than a minute,
Brenda could not find a pulse.
What alarmed her most was the
fact that the old man had only been dead a few seconds, and he was already cold
to the touch. She’d never encountered it before in her seven year career. In
the distance, she heard the wail of the ambulance sirens.
She glanced down the road, then
back down at the old man on the pavement. His eyes snapped open and she gasped,
took a few steps back. The old man sat up as Brenda and the other café patrons
stood aghast. There was not a hint of recollection in his eyes.
The old man remembered nothing.
Not his name, not where he was from. He didn’t know who these people were, nor
did he recall collapsing on the sidewalk. None of his memories remained.
His brain was operating on pure
instinct. And that instinct was telling him to feed.
* * *
Baldwin, New York
Ira Schillinger was too busy
drowning his sorrows in bourbon to turn on the news. If he had, he would’ve
known what was going on out there. But Schillinger relished his buzz, and
basked in blissful ignorance.
Besides, saving the world was not
his top priority. Ira, a former construction worker, couldn’t even save his own
job. Hence the daily liquid breakfasts and the two-pack-a-day habit.
He showed up to work one day,
half in the bag, and foreman canned his ass on the spot. Not even the union
could save his job.
Now he was working as a private
detective. It wasn’t his first choice, but he needed a job and his uncle ran an
agency. He helped Ira get his license and put him straight to work. When he wasn’t
out working private cases, spying on cheating housewives or disloyal husbands,
he drank.
And Ira didn’t work too many
cases. Few people were hiring private investigators in 2013. So with all that
spare time, he drank like a wild frat boy on spring break. No comfort in the
world could help Ira resist the temptation to imbibe.
The ground shook as he heard an
explosion emanate in the distance. The explosion was accompanied by a cacophony
of sirens–car alarms, ambulance sirens, police sirens, fire department sirens
coming from every direction.
Ira dropped his bottle, grabbed
his coat, and took off.
* * *
Evan Larson was surrounded on
all sides. So he did the only logical thing he could think of. He blew up a
car–his own car. A brand new, fresh off the lot Ford Mustang.
Truth be told, it wasn’t really
his. He was just “borrowing” it for the time being. Still he hated to part with
it. It pained him to see it go up in flames the way it did. Evan had found a
handkerchief in the center console with the monogram L.M. embroidered on it,
which Evan assumed was the initials of the vehicle’s rightful owner.
Evan had removed the gas cap and
stuffed the handkerchief deep inside, soaking it in gasoline. He pulled it out,
and stuffed it back in halfway. Using his lighter, he lit one end of the
handkerchief and ran as if he was going for the Olympic gold.
One block up, he heard the
explosion and stopped in his tracks for a moment. He turned back and saw the
flames, saw the black pillars of smoke rising up to the air. Bodies were
scattered in the street, but Evan felt not a shred of remorse. These people
weren’t human. Not anymore.
Three blocks up, he bumped
shoulders with Ira Schillinger. “Did you hear something?” Ira asked. “Sounded
like an explosion.”
“That was me,” Evan said. “I
blew up my car.”
“Did I miss something? What the
hell is going on around here?”
Evan summed up the entire
situation with one word: “Zombies.”
“Nuff said. Let’s get the hell
out of dodge. I’d ask if you have a car, but…”
“Funny,” Evan muttered, and they
both started running in the same direction.
* * *
Ira Schillinger and Evan Larson
caught the next train out of Baldwin. And they made a new friend while they
were waiting on the platform. Lance Mathis.
“Where you heading?” Lance had
inquired once they had boarded the train to Penn Station.
“Anywhere but here,” Evan said.
“We should try and get out of
New York as soon as possible,” Ira said. “Before it spreads.”
“I’d drive us out of New York if
I could, but some asshole blew up my car,” Lance said. Evan chucked nervously.
“I hate to burst your bubble,”
another commuter said from across the aisle. “But it’s already spread. It’s all
over the radio, the TV. It’s all their talking about it.”
“It’s happening all over
America?” Ira asked.
“Buddy, it’s happening all over
the world.”
They were nearly thrown from
their seats as the brakes screeched and the train reached a sudden stop. Then it
gained momentum again, this time traveling in reverse.
“Um, I don’t think this is the
way to the city,” Evan said.
“Are we going in reverse?” Lance
asked.
“It appears so.”
In moments, the conductors voice
came over the loudspeakers. “Ladies and gentlemen, I apologize for the
inconvenience. But by orders of the military, New York City is now under
quarantine. No one gets in and no one goes out without proper clearance. At
this time, all citizens of Nassau County have been ordered to relocate to
Sunrise Mall. This order is mandatory by the federal government. Our next stop
is Massapequa.”
* * *
Massapequa, New York.
Sunrise Mall was a refuge from
the maelstrom. It offered food, shelter, medical supplies, and other vast
amenities.
Mac and TK were on the first
floor, staring at this sea of humanity. Hundreds, if not thousands, filled all
three floors of the mall.
“This place is definitely over
capacity,” TK quipped. “If a fire broke out right now, we’d all be toast.”
“Don’t even joke like that,” Mac
chided.
“Do you think George Romero ever
figured zombies would be all the rage in 2013?” TK asked.
“I’d guess not,” Mac said. “But
then again, who knew films like Hostel and Saw would make as much money as they
did? That’s the gamble with horror films and TV shows. You take a risk and hope
it pays off.”
“I blame that Walking Dead show
for all of this. And all those posers who watch it. I was into zombies way
before zombies were cool.”
“Zombies honestly scare the shit
out of me,” Mac confessed.
“Really?”
“Yeah. They have no memory. And
that’s the scariest part of all. Not even knowing who are, not being in control
of your actions.”
“I think it’d be kind of cool to
be a zombie.”
“You would think that. Let’s
just change the subject.”
“Oh, I’ve got a good one. Who’d
win a fight: Wolverine from X-Men, or Superman?”
“Hmm…that is a good one. The man
of steel versus the man of adamantium steel. That’d be a battle for the ages.”
“My money is on Wolverine.”
“No way. Superman would take him
in a heartbeat.”
“Na-ah, Wolverine would
slaughter him.”
Their esoteric debate was interrupted
by Allison Shane, who asked if either of them had a light. TK and Mac were not
smokers, but at that moment, they’d wished they were. Allison was a thin young
woman with a pale complexion and blue streaks in her jet-black hair. She
sported a number of horror-related tattoos, including the number 237 tattooed
on her left wrist and Freddy Krueger’s glove tattooed on one shoulder.
Allison wandered past them in
search of a fellow smoker, and Mac and TK couldn’t help but trail after her.
This girl was a goddess to avid nerds like Mac and TK. And since they were all
stuck under the same roof, it couldn’t hurt to try making new friends.
Allison Shane found Jackson
Creed standing near one of the side entrances, smoking a Newport. The doors
were all locked for their protection, and military personnel had set up camp
all around the mall.
“Is this the smokers lounge?”
she asked.
“I guess it is,” he shrugged.
“Got a light?”
“Anything for you, little missy,”
he smiled and lit her cigarette with his zippo. “What’s your name?”
She took a drag and said, “Allison
Shane. But everyone calls me Alice.”
“Allison Shane. I like that.
Sounds like Alice in Chains.”
“Yeah, my dad was a big Layne
Staley fan. What’s your name?”
“Jackson Creed. But everyone
calls me Jax.”
Mac and TK caught up to Allison
and after some hesitation, TK spoke first. “Hey. We never got the chance to
properly introduce ourselves. This is Mac. He’s a perpetual fountain of random
factoids and useless information.”
“And this is TK,” Mac said. “He’s
a comic book nerd with a zombie fetish.”
“I don’t have a fetish. I just
think zombies are cool.”
Alice laughed it off. “I’m
Allison Shane, but you can call me Alice. And this is Jax Creed.”
“Well, Jackson. But please, call
me Jax. You boys smoke?”
“Not really the type,” Mac said.
“Is this the smokers lounge?”
Ira Schillinger asked as he, Evan Larson, and Lance Mathis approached and Ira
took out his pack of Marlboros.
“It appears so,” Jax said.
Lance had been following Ira and
Evan since the train. But Lance had grown increasingly cold ever since Ira had
properly introduced himself.
They all took turns introducing
themselves and once they are all acquainted, Ira spoke. “Things are getting
ugly out there. We may need to stick together and formulate a strategy. If
things fall apart, if the military can’t contain the situation, it’s every man
and woman for themselves.”
“Listen to this guy,” Lance
said, rolling his eyes. “He thinks he’s in charge all of a sudden.”
Ira turned to face Lance. “You’ve
got a problem with me?”
“No problems. I just don’t like
taking orders from a Jew,” Lance said, exposing his true colors.
“And I don’t like taking orders
from a parolee,” Ira said. “I saw your tattoos on the train. I know jailhouse
ink when I see it.”
“Are you speaking from personal
experience?” Lance asked. They were face to face, chest to chest now. Ira
balled up his fists, ready to take the first swing.
“Hey, cool your jets,” Jax said.
“He’s right. We’re going to need to stick together on this one. It’s all a
matter of survival. If we watch each other’s backs, we can make it out of this
mess alive.”
Two military officers approached
the side entrance, escorting an older man. One of the officers unlocked the
doors and the other office rushed the man inside, locking the doors behind him.
“Who are you?” Jax asked.
“Ryan Slater. I was sent to Long
Island to cover a story.”
“Well, buddy, I think you found
yourself the story of the century,” Jax chuckled. “Make yourself at home. I
have a feeling we might be here for a while.”
To
Be Continued With Part Two: FROM AUTUMN TO ASHES
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