Epidemic of the Undead: A Zombie Novel

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Epidemic of the Undead: A Zombie Novel Page 2

by P. A. Douglas


  The fallen biker lay on his back, his tattooed arms flaying in every direction, as the crowd covered him. The mass wasn’t thick enough to drown his screams as his obese body was torn apart. They were eating him alive!

  “I don’t know, but I’m not about to go out there and find out!”

  A loud high-pitched squeal shrieked from the flat screen TV. The cashier jumped, startling Chris and his two band mates.

  “Oh shit, that scared the crap out of me.” Steve held his hand over his heart.

  Outside, several of the lingering attackers turned toward the storefront and started walking over. The high-pitched squeal from the television was drawing their attention.

  On the television, an emergency broadcast signal replaced the news, displaying text warnings, and giving shelter locations. Just as quick, the high-pitched signal disappeared. The picture changed back to live footage at the news station. The live broadcast was shaky and kept blurring in and out of focus. Two men sat behind a desk arguing back and forth. The audio was spotty, peaking occasionally.

  “The dead have risen! That is a fact. You’re over thinking this situation,” the reporter on the left said.

  “I refuse to hear this nonsense,” the other man argued. “It can’t be anything more than a terrorist attack. Hell, I would even go so far as to believe an underground faction of gangs is behind this. Zombies? You have got to be kidding me!”

  “So you presume to tell me that I should believe that an underground gang of vandals has concocted this elaborate nationwide catastrophe! Don’t be obtuse," the anchor said. He lifted a few papers from the desk and tossed them into the air. “They are dead, and that is a fact!”

  “Fact? Ha! Don’t make me laugh. What facts do you have to support that idiocy?”

  “Why not step out in the street for a change and find out in person! The truth is that the recently departed are rising up and are in a murderous rage. Those people who are killed in the attack, rise up and become killers too! It’s out in our cities and will soon be in our homes.”

  “Nonsense!” The other reporter yelled.

  “Do you guys believe this horse piss?” Mark asked, as he ran his fingers through his hair.

  Steve glared at him.

  Chris reached into his pocket and pulled out his cell. “I wonder if all that’s going on has any connection to our phones not working?” He looked down. Sure enough, his cell still had full bars. Calling up the home phone number to his parent’s place, he pressed send. The noise that Mark had described hearing repeated in his ear. The signal was being jammed or interfered with. He put his phone away, defeated. He hoped like hell that his parents were alright. The man on TV had said something about it being Nationwide. He swallowed hard hoping things were too bad in Tennessee. If not, his dad was smart. He could handle things.

  A brash, booming sound erupted at the door as a skinny fist pounded on the windowpane. The hand smeared red fluid on the glass. Several other attackers quickly followed suit. Two turned into six, which quickly turned into fifteen. In a simultaneous fit and concerted effort, the unimaginable creatures fought to break in.

  Again the report of gunfire picked up outside, sounding further away.

  As the storefront became even more crowded with bodies, Chris wondered where they had all come from. It had only been an hour, maybe two at the most, since they first arrived, and at that time, the area was nearly deserted. Maybe the looters and rioters have been hitting street after street and are finally reaching us, he thought. Or what if the TV is right and those people really are dead?

  “Please tell me you have a key to lock this place up?” Just as those words came out of Chris Commons’ mouth, the glass that separated them from the dead broke through.

  Shattering glass fell to the wood floor, followed by the thud of falling bodies. Staggering to its feet, the first of several ghouls stood and began its lurch forward. More followed, climbing through the opening. Not at all concerned with the splintering glass, they dragged themselves through the window, cutting up their faces and arms. It was a horridly morbid sight.

  The cashier screamed.

  “Oh shit! Oh shit!” Mark said, not knowing which way to run, and then he made his way toward the back of the building. “They are dead! Just like that TV guy said. Those people are fucking dead!”

  The closest one shuffled forward with its arms raised and it moaned a guttural unnatural sound. Blood covered its hands and feet and its sneering mouth exposed crimson stained teeth. The zombie’s torn shirt revealed splintered ribs. A white bone protruded from its midsection like a toothpick tearing through paper. Blood poured from the open wounds soaking into the creature’s jeans. The slap of its bare feet rang hollow in the air between hissing moans. Reddish brown footprints stained the wood floor in its wake. Behind, three other creatures struggled to stand. The arms that reached in from outside were still growing in number. They wanted in.

  “You got a back door to this place?” Chris frantically asked, shoving the blonde toward the back of the coffee shop. The crash of falling chairs and tables echoed, as the growing mob of undead closed in on the living.

  “Yeah. I’m parked around back,” the cashier said.

  He shoved her forward, meeting up with Mark and Steve by the back door. “Well, what the hell’s the hold up?”

  Mark stood at the door with it cracked just enough to peek out, a bat tightly gripped in one hand at his side. “I can’t see anything.”

  “What the fuck, dude? What the hell is going on?” Steve cried, starting to panic. He looked back, seeing the intruders slowly closing in. “What the hell is their problem?”

  “You heard the TV, man. They're dead!” Something behind them collided with the floor. The loud clang reverberated off the wood floor and brick walls making Chris turn around. The things were getting closer. “I don’t think there’s much time for debate, Mark. Just move!”

  The door swung open to an empty back lot. A light pink Hyundai Accent sat parked at one side. On the opposite side, a large dumpster, wafting odors of spoiled milk, had one door flap kicked open. The coast was clear. Mark and Steve darted out first, followed by Chris and the cashier. Exiting last, Chris kicked the door closed with one foot. It didn’t shut, but bounced back swinging outward.

  As Chris crossed the lot, two ghouls rounded the corner near the gas station’s rear, heading toward them. Grunts preceded the stiff pursuit and outstretched arms clutched the air in eager anticipation. Chris instantly recognized one as the lady that had fled the blue Sedan earlier. Her left arm was severed and dripping blood, leaving a trail of inconsistent splatter. The young boy next to her was even worse for wear with his stomach torn open and the contents on display. Nothing but a pair of boxers and one shoe remained on his otherwise naked body. Blood soaked his midsection down to the knees.

  A large chunk of the boy’s intestine spewed out from the open wound. It slapped wet in the dirt and cement, right in front of his path. As it squashed under the zombie’s foot, the sloshing viscera splashed in a heap of mashed chunks. Just as fast, the boy tripped over his spilled entrails, falling forward, and slipping on the abdominal muck. His head collided with the ground with a solid crack. There was no attempt to catch its fall, as the creature’s only concern was its chase of prey.

  “Fucking hell,” Steve said, with one hand gripping at the pink car door and eyeing the two creatures.

  “My purse! I forgot my purse!”

  “No offense, but forget the damn purse,” Mark said, just as the first of a dozen ghouls reached the back door to the coffee shop from inside.

  “My car keys are in my bag!” She frantically patted down the front pockets of her skintight jeans.

  With its ribs protruding out, the first of several zombies slopped into the lot from the coffee shop’s rear door.

  “Fuck the car!” Mark yelled. He ran toward the dead female with the missing arm, bat at the ready. With one wide forceful swing, the bat collided with the dead woman. As th
e metal bat met her face, an echoing ping signaled the crack of bone and cartilage, sending her nose inward. A violent spray of black and red blood squirted out upon impact. The woman collapsed to the ground, violently kicking and convulsing.

  Mark, Steve, Chris and their new female friend darted past the writhing creature and the boy struggled to get to his feet, the intestinal muck working against him. With Mark in the lead, the four rounded the big metal dumpster, out into the open street behind the gas station.

  “Where are we going?” the cashier cried.

  “We need to get to the van!” Mark yelled, briskly jogging past the backside of the convenience store toward the next side street.

  As they arrived at the street junction, Steve was already heaving to catch his breath. “Man, I don’t know how much longer I can do this, guys. What the hell is going on?” He leaned over a few seconds later, vomiting on his shoes.

  “Dude, you need to get into shape and keep it together,” Chris said, peering down the side street. From behind, the sounds of lustful moans permeated the air.

  Chris took a moment to weigh his options. It wasn’t the best place to be staying in the streets right now. They were venerable and out in the open. Sure, the van was less than a block away. But the sound of distant gunfire popped in the air followed by shouts, telling Chris they needed to move. A heavy-set man emerged from bushes four or five hundred feet ahead. Limping at a pace equal to a crawl, he only made it halfway across the street before collapsing. Behind him, two putrid creatures followed.

  The man was so exhausted that he didn’t scream. He didn’t even let out a whimper as gnashing teeth and tearing claws ripped the flesh off his body.

  “We going to do this or what?” Mark said, stepping out of the shadows, and into the poorly lit street. “We need to get to the van and get the hell out of here!”

  Mark, you are going to get us freaking killed, Chris thought, as he watched Steve and the girl follow Mark’s lead. “Stick to the sidewalk,” Chris whispered, hoping that Mark knew what he was doing.

  Concealed in the shadows, Mark led the group down the narrow sidewalk. The creatures devouring the man were more concerned with their prize than to notice. Across the street, screams erupted from inside a building. Just as they ended, a loud crashing sound trailed, followed by a sudden bright flash of light. Smoke rolled out of a window followed by flames. The fire grew amongst crackling pops. It burned faster than he had imagined possible. Chris stood, and in awe of the terror, watched with the others.

  The flames pushed back the safety of the shadows beyond the sidewalk.

  “It’s the end of the world, dude,” Mark said, wide-eyed, still watching the flames.

  A zombie stepped out from behind a tree beside the walkway and grabbed his arm. Taking Mark by surprise, he stumbled backward as he wrestled with the creature. The aluminum bat clattered against the cement as it fell from his hand. When the metallic clang echoed out into the street, numerous ghouls began circling in.

  Chris glanced back to see that the fat man no longer had any flesh to offer, and the two feeding on him, joined in with the others heading toward them. The pungent stench of rotting meat rolled through as the dead began to close in.

  The fire still raged, lighting up the scene, as it steadily digested the building.

  The zombie’s head lunged forward as it wrestled Mark to the ground. Its teeth met the flesh of Mark’s neck just as he fell flat on his back. The creature landed on top of him. He screamed as white and red chunks tore away from the side of his neck. As it pulled away, the creature’s mouth was full. The tissue being torn from muscle and Mark's desperate cry ingrained itself into Chris' mind. Blood burst forth into the air from Mark’s lips as the creature went down for another bite.

  Before Chris had time to process the circumstances, he did the unthinkable. The unimaginable. He had never harmed another human being in his life, until now. He reached down and picked up the bat. The scraping sound against the cement made the creature rear its snarling head away from Mark. Her lips were soaked with his blood and chunks of matted, chewed meat spilled from her mouth. Most of her scalp was missing and one eye was pushed back unnaturally deep in its socket. She hissed in defiance.

  That was when the first blow went crashing down. Chris swung as hard as he possibly could. The hit was solid, sending the zombie to the ground, but not for good. Just as his bat came away, the woman tried to fight back. Her neck was dislocated from the jarring impact. Her right arm twitched slightly as her head bobbed up and down. She lay limp on the sidewalk. Her teeth were steadily chomping, and her eyes glazed over in white mist. Chris stared down at her dead twitching body, unsure if she was even dead at all. The stench of her rotting flesh brought bile to the back of his throat.

  The bat collided with her head again, then once more. Blood and meaty chunks flung into the air with the backswing of the bat. She lay motionless. Dead as dead could be.

  “Holy hell,” Steve, said looking down on the mess.

  Mark was gone. He lay bleeding out, a lifeless and bleak void, with a stare that glimmered into Chris’ soul. A red pool of blood steadily grew around his head, pouring out from the gaping hole in his unnaturally pinkish-white neck.

  “He’s dead!” The cashier screamed, weakening at the knees.

  Steve caught her just before she fell to the ground. “We need to freakin’ move,” he said, looking around at the attention drawn. Over a dozen of the undead had invaded the surrounding area and were closing in.

  Chris knelt down beside Mark’s corpse, choking back tears. Trying to stop the bleeding, he cupped the gaping wound on Mark’s throat with his hand. Blood continued to flow between his fingers as he applied pressure.

  “Don’t die on me . . . don’t freaking die on me, prick.”

  A single tear formed in Chris’ right eye. It broke free and slid down his cheek. Looking into his cousin’s emotionless eyes, Chris thought of the first band that he and Mark had put together. They had called themselves ‘The Sock Eaters.’ They never played a single show, but the façade brought in a lot of tail just by talking it up. “Yeah, we’re in a band,” Mark would say. The girls ate that shit up. Hell, that’s probably what started Mark’s ‘all talk, no follow through’ problem. Chris could never get the guy to do anything right. Now, if there was a lady in the room, that would be another story. Chris felt the emotions begin to swell inside. He and Mark had been through a lot together in life. He sobbed. The last thing he needed right now was to fall apart. At times, Mark may have gotten under his skin, but they were still flesh and blood. He couldn’t let Steve see him fold. He needed to be strong. He needed to be strong for Steve.

  “Chris!” Steve was growing impatient, and so were those things. “What the hell are you doing?”

  Chris looked up, jingling a set of keys in his blood-covered hand, still leaning over Mark’s lifeless body. “Keys to the van, man,” he struggled to say.

  He looked around at the closing threat and estimated the closest zombie was still at least fifteen feet away. If they stayed on the move and kept quiet, they just might have a chance. These things are slow, he thought. “I think we can outrun them!”

  “What?” the blonde cashier had been lost in her own thoughts of survival.

  “Run!” Chris stood up, charging the nearest creature with the bat cocked on his shoulder. He hoped like hell that Steve was right behind him, because he wasn’t looking back for anything. The bat connected. The side of the putrid ghoul’s head caved in, spilling out pink meat and hairy skull fragments. Chris heard the body thump to the ground. He just kept running. The van wasn’t very far off. He had to make it.

  * * *

  It didn’t take the three of them long before the van to come into view. Leaning against a tree, Steve tried to catch his breath, watching for movement. Any movement. There was none. The smell of death grew stronger along with the sounds of those hot on their trail. Because the things were slow, time was on their side, but it was runn
ing out quickly. In the distance, above the buildings, the glow of fire lit up the night. Buildings were burning. The one that they had watched as it caught fire and then several more. The faint hiss and pop of crackling wood resonated in the stillness.

  Chris scanned the area for hostiles. A little less than a block away, a few strays wandered in front of the coffee shop. One undead ghoul stood doing nothing, except slightly swaying in place. Its feet occasionally shifted, moving dead weight from one side to the other. Two other zombies were still gnawing on the dead biker in the middle of the street. A faint series of chomps and slurps reached Chris’ ears as he watched, cringing with disgust. The bike. Chris didn’t see the guy’s bike anywhere. Maybe it went off the side of the road into a ditch. As he scanned the area looking for where the motorcycle might have come to rest, he thought he saw a face peeping through a second floor window nearby. They didn’t try to signal, and he didn’t blame them.

  The area was clear, but he knew better than to trust his eyes only. It wouldn’t be until they made their presence known that the undead would come out of the woodwork looking for food. They were probably wandering aimlessly in the dark corners and crevices of buildings waiting for something alive to make itself known. Waiting for that perfect moment when a meal presented itself. Then, and only then, would they strike.

  “Chris,” Steve whispered. “What the hell are you doing, man?” The stench and moans were getting stronger, and the side street chase was still underway.

  Chris waved him off, knowing it would take a minute for the dead to catch up.

  Seated at the far corner of the convenience store parking lot, Chris continued to survey the area. The blue Sedan sat parked with the driver side door wide open. The gas station was vacant and the lights were off. One cheesy white tiger poster blinked its battery powered light-up eyes in the windowsill.

 

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