This Plague of Days, Season Two (The Zombie Apocalypse Serial)

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This Plague of Days, Season Two (The Zombie Apocalypse Serial) Page 24

by Robert Chazz Chute


  Misericordia felt the traitors’ blood pulsing through his system. He’d bitten many humans, but this was the first time he’d killed a turned vampire. He felt a new, more powerful rush through his brain. His chest felt lighter. He felt like he might levitate. Human blood was a strong drug. This was much better. This was the highest high, meth and cocaine and utter triumph packaged in sacks of meat and blood and bone.

  A human appeared at a nearby doorway. He was the first human Misericordia had seen in days who had not run from him. The Alpha leader watched as the man held a door open, urging the children to run and escape the slaughter. Screams of terror echoed up the stairwells. The vampires were feeding.

  After the last child fled through the door, the human stepped into the room and closed the door behind him, blocking the way. The man held a red fire ax. He stared at the naked vampire.

  “You’re trembling,” Misericordia said.

  “Must be rage.” His eyes flicked to the bodies of two dead children. A boy and a girl of no more than seven had been thrown against a far wall. They lay in bloody twists on the floor.

  The vampire smiled. “I’d almost believe your brave words, but I can see your fear. It’s a yellow mist. It tastes sweet. You’re cake.”

  The man shrugged, determined to stop the vampire from following the children. “Your eyes freak me out.”

  “There’s no need to guard the children’s escape.” Misericordia gestured to the fallen traitors. “My orders were to leave the young alone.”

  “I think I better stay, anyway,” the human said. “Obviously, you’re a good guy, but what about the others downstairs?”

  “I apologize for my tribe’s lack of discipline. We are young. We have so few rules, it’s important we keep to the few we have.” Misericordia stepped forward, preparing to spring. He’d take the ax from the human first. Then he’d use it, but out of respect and to show mercy, he’d be quick.

  “It’s about numbers, isn’t it? Your rule about not killing kids.”

  “You’re smarter than you look.”

  The man shrugged. “I was an accountant. Everything’s about numbers. A guy who does what you do, letting kids live is just planning for the future.”

  “Future meals, yes.”

  “I figured it couldn’t be because you were a nice guy. Cool British accent, though.”

  The Alpha leader smiled again, wider this time. “A guy who does what I do? Do you know what I do?”

  The human glanced to the dead children again.

  “No! That’s not the allure at all. That’s necessary. That’s what nature requires of us. I’m talking about what I have become. I can smell the fear in your sweat. I can see the distinctive colors of doubt and anger and terror in the dim vortex of energy around you. I can run for hours and never get fatigued. I hardly feel the cold, or heat or pain.”

  “No pain?”

  The vampire saw the sting and ache in the man’s aura, from his right hip to his knee. “No pain.”

  “What’s wrong with you?” the man asked. “What drugs are you on?”

  “Nothing’s wrong with me. I’ve never felt better or stronger. This feeling…it’s like being high all the time on a wonderful drug you never have to pay for. No hangovers. No sadness. No doubt. It’s incredibly freeing.”

  “Being a monster does that, I guess.”

  “Not a monster. I’m the new model for the new world.”

  “So…the drug you’re on gives you DOGS.”

  “Hm?”

  “Delusions of grandeur.”

  The vampire’s smile disappeared. “This is what resolve looks like. This is what a man can be when he lives without fear. That’s what a vampire is.”

  Misericordia watched the man’s head come up at that. He watched the colors of the man’s aura shift slightly. He saw his opening. “You could be one of us.”

  “No. I couldn’t.”

  The vampire chose that moment to move. In a blink, he’d closed on the human and wrenched the ax from his grip before it could be raised against him.

  “I’m down two soldiers. I choose who can become like us and I choose carefully. Now that I have the ax, I’ll ask you once more. Which do you choose? Death or a new life without fear?”

  The man took a long time to answer. His body shook beyond his ability to quell the muscle spasms. His heart pounded as he answered, “The equation has changed.”

  “And, as you say, everything is about numbers.”

  “I-I believe in math.”

  “Soon you’ll be open to all sorts of new possibilities. Soon, you’ll see more than numbers. You’ll feel real freedom. What is your name?”

  “Chris Evans.”

  “Kneel, Chris Evans.”

  He knelt, trembling.

  “You swear not to kill humans under the age of twenty. You will be my weapon and I will choose your prey. The humans will call you a monster. That’s only because we are beyond their understanding. And you will have a new name.”

  “I swear.”

  Misericordia lay the ax blade on one shoulder and then the other, knighting his new tribe member. “Rise. Your name is Ax. Forget what you were so you can become something to be proud of. You will be an Alpha. You will begin again.”

  The human stood. He squeezed his eyes shut. “How is it done? Do you bite me on the neck or — ” he rolled up his sleeve to expose his arm, “Will that do the job?”

  The Alpha chuckled, pulled the human close, pinned his arms in a tight embrace and kissed him on the lips as gently as a lover. “I’m very proud of you. You are the first to choose us. Welcome to the next evolution.”

  The vampire threw his new tribe mate to the floor. “When the transformation is complete, join us downstairs.” He paused to look at the children’s corpses. “You’ve never had a proper meal and might feel a little off at first. They’re already long gone, so don’t let that little boy and girl go to waste.”

  Misericordia stuck the spike of the fire ax into the two dead Alphas and dragged them after him, leaving a bloody trail down the steps. He craved more vampire meat.

  TO EXORCISE DEMONS, WE MUST STAND UP

  “A couple notes before we wrap things up.” Xavier addressed the group, all business again. “I know y’all want some news of the world. Our Worldly Information Team has been scanning the air for new information. The President of the United States is still reportedly in a secure location.”

  Jack and Anna looked at each other quizzically. The radio had reported the president was dead of the virus in the early days of Sutr. Jack didn’t trust the cult leader, of course, but she wanted to believe this good news. Perhaps that’s all it took to form a cult or sell anything: give everyone something to fear; let them have something to hope for; and tell the rubes what they want to hear.

  “That’s really all they’ll say about the president. I know all our prayers are with him and his family. Sorry, Canadians. Radio silence on uh…your Prime Minister…what’s-his-name? Your guy.”

  Jack’s legs had fallen asleep. She rubbed and jostled her calves, fighting pins and needles. She’d need them lively if she and Anna attempted a run for the van.

  “The problem,” Xavier said, “is that the only control our governments seem to be able to exert is sending out radio bulletins telling us to stay home, starve and die.”

  Low, discontented mutters rippled through the crowd. “Good thing you didn’t follow that advice, hey, pilgrims? If you hadn’t got a move on, you wouldn’t be here!”

  Xavier paused and searched the crowd. His shaved and waxed head looked like a lightbulb in the bright light. “We will give you more developments as we hear them. Please don’t pester us for news about your home town. Everyone has a home town. Trust us when we say that whatever we hear, we pass on to you. I don’t know what’s happened to all of your families and friends. God hasn’t given me the gift of knowing those sorts of things.

  “But here’s
the good news,” he said, pausing dramatically. “We will be showing some Disney movies tomorrow night for the kids.”

  Groans rose from the crowd, but Xavier plunged forward, ignoring dissent. “I know our exodus is especially hard on the children, so we’ve got some DVDs someone donated. Disney may be just about the best darn thing the United States ever produced, so we’ll be taking that into New Israel.

  “In closing, let me lay this heavy on you!” Xavier said. He seemed to wait for the customary three claps of approval but he’d lost his audience. He breezed on quickly. “Our new group total as of this morning is three-hundred and twenty-three people who dare to ask, ‘What’s in it for me?’”

  He received three ragged claps for that announcement. “There is strength in numbers!” Xavier declared. “We’ll be fine as long as we stick together!

  “Great!” A disembodied woman’s voice, thin and reedy, came out of the dark from somewhere in the middle of the tent. “But donations from a few new recruits can’t feed ten of us! When do we eat?”

  A collective gasp rose and the searchlight momentarily left Xavier to find the speaker. Several large men stepped out of the shadows at the edges of the tent, searching faces.

  A piercing whistle went up and the searchlight immediately left the crowd and focused back on Xavier. His head was down again as if he was studying the foot of the stage, searching for his next words. “There will be more food very soon,” he said. “Enough for everybody!”

  More ragged applause broke out. It was unclear who the crowd was clapping for, Xavier or the woman who dared to ask when they would eat.

  “One more thing and then we’ll finish up,” Xavier said. “Kids, ask your parents to check you for lice…in fact, everybody check each other for lice, will you? In fact, adults? Have some fun checking each other out in the tall grass if you’re of a mind to. See, we don’t want lice to spread or someone will say that’s a new plague from God. Can I get a witness?”

  “Amen!”

  The spotlights left Xavier and pointed toward the ceiling. They could just make out his white suit as he retreated to the rear tent flap alone.

  Out of the darkness, Xavier yelled, “If we stay pure, we’re all going to make it! That’s received wisdom!”

  * * *

  The congregants gathered their things and began to make their way to the exit. They seemed in a rush. Everyone looked so painfully thin, she doubted many were headed for the tall grass. They looked as exhausted as she felt.

  How long had the group chanted before Xavier appeared for his sermon? Chanting for hours and keeping the group perpetually hungry could break down psychological barriers and make people more malleable. Whether by design or by fate, these were a cult’s tactics.

  Mrs. Bendham whispered in Dahlia’s ear urgently. Dahlia nodded and patted the old woman on the knee.

  Jack grabbed Anna’s wrist. She hoped they could slip out with the grumbling crowd. She didn’t know what to do about Mrs. Bendham. In fact, Jack was so tired, she realized she didn’t care what happened to the old woman.

  I’ve tried so hard to be good and forgiving, Jack thought. I can’t do it anymore. Screw good intentions.

  “Anna, I’ve been thinking — ”

  “Let’s get out of here and dump the old lady with Xavier,” Anna said.

  Dahlia appeared before Jack, smiling, but blocking their way. “First night, you’re always closest to the light! Don’t go yet! Things aren’t yet set!”

  Anna glowered at her. “I do not like green eggs and ham. I do not like them, or crazy bitches with guns, either.”

  Dahlia’s clown face melted, the smile destroyed by a sneer.

  “What do you want from us?” Jack said.

  “We want you to join us, of course!”

  Jack turned. Xavier had reappeared. He sat on the desk on the stage, his legs swinging. Without the crowd to play to, he seemed smaller. The showman’s façade faded.

  The old man who had spoken before pushed forward, limping around the guard with the huge biceps. Xavier’s bodyguard spoke in a surprisingly high voice. “This is the one, Xavier, came with a big convoy. Most of them newbies is with him.”

  As if that was their signal, a large group peeled off from the remaining crowd. There appeared to be three generations of men and women standing behind the old man in solidarity.

  The bodyguard looked perplexed, unused to being ignored. He stepped behind the old man and crossed his arms so his fists pushed his upper arms out, making them look even more inflated.

  “Ah, the challenger,” Xavier said. “You’re among friends, grandfather.”

  “I choose my friends,” the old man said. “You chose me. You forced me and my family here against our will.”

  “Forced?” Xavier looked genuinely concerned.

  “What do you call that roadblock down on the highway?”

  “Opportunity,” Xavier said. “But like all chances for good things, you have free will. You can turn away and leave a good thing behind.”

  “So we’re free to go?” Jack said.

  “Well, yes, but — ”

  “We’ve heard the pitch,” Anna spoke up. “We have other plans. People to see, places to go. Anchors away.”

  Xavier turned his smile on Anna. His eyes flicked down and up to drink her in. “But if we all stick together, princess — ”

  “We’ll all be drinking poisoned Kool-Aid someday,” Jack finished for him.

  “Wait a minute,” Mrs. Bendham said. “I think Mr. Xavier has a point. I almost got shot at that military roadblock! I’ve lost my husband. I saw the killings on the bridge. If we stay in a large group, we’ll be safer.”

  “We’ve got family in the east,” Jack said. “We’re sticking with family.”

  “What if your family isn’t there anymore?” Xavier asked. “You can’t be sure they’re still there.”

  “They will be,” Jack said, surprised by how confident she sounded. Somehow, inexplicably, it was her conviction that her father-in-law was still alive and waiting for them.

  Xavier looked up at the tent’s ceiling so long Jack was tempted to follow his gaze to see what he was staring at. It occurred to her that Xavier was waiting for God to give him the words to convince them to stay.

  “Look,” Anna said. “It’s been a nice night and we liked the singing and I’m sure you’re a nice guy. But let’s not ruin the evening now. It’s been a fun date but let’s leave it at that.”

  Xavier levelled his gaze at Anna. Jack seized Anna’s wrist again and began to pull her away but Anna resisted, stood her ground and stared back at Xavier.

  He giggled. His giggle burst into a full-throated laugh. “It has been a nice night,” Xavier said when he could control himself again. “Dahlia, please see these folks back to their vehicles with God’s blessings and mine, too.”

  He looked to the big bodyguard. “Lawrence, this man and his family want to leave us. Please see that they get back to the highway safely. And we have to have a talk about how we invite people to our meetings. You screw up my average in gaining converts with tonight’s tactics. I’ve got God’s answers in my hip pocket, but you’re handicapping me, man!”

  “It wasn’t Larry,” Dahlia said. “It was me. We’ve got too many mouths to feed to be picky. We’re hungry, X! You keep pushing us north too fast and we don’t stop to — ”

  “Steal food or raid farms,” Xavier interrupted her wearily. “No, we don’t. When we get to the New Promised Land, we need to stay pure. To find it, we have to be able to say with a clear conscience that we deserve it. I’m not going to be Moses, denied God’s promise for one moment of violence.”

  Dahlia grimaced.

  “It’s not me telling you this. You know who’s telling you this.”

  “You get to beat us over the head with anything that comes to you as long as you say it’s coming from You Know Who,” Dahlia replied.

  “Voldemort?” Anna sai
d. Jack shot her a look but Xavier laughed again.

  “I do wish you would stay, little princess. You are quick!”

  “If I were quicker, we’d be gone by now.”

  Xavier’s smile faded and he sighed heavily. “No converts tonight.” He made the sign of the cross. “Go in peace. Go with God. Via con dios. Burn in hell if that’s what you really want. I can’t save everyone.”

  WE CANNOT REFUSE THIS OVERFLOWING CUP

  Misericordia paced the hospital lobby. Aside from the traitors who had failed to follow his orders, he had lost no one else from his tribe in the attack on Marion County Hospital. He’d gained one new recruit, but already the Alpha leader eyed the youngest and oldest vampires hungrily.

  The Sutr-A virus had optimized them all, but the humans who were too young or past their prime could only be improved so much. The children were too small for combat and the old ones slowed the tribe.

  In the melee of his attack at the Brickyard refugee camp, he had not been selective. To overcome his captors and build an army, he’d bitten the children first. Now he thought how succulent the littlest cannibals’ bone marrow would taste.

  The messenger had warned him about becoming a monster. Clearly, the dreamer did not understand the enormity of his needs. When he made the boy one of his tribe, he’d understand.

  Contrary to what Misericordia expected, human flesh did not taste like chicken. It was like the most delicious pork. He’d eaten marinated duck at an expensive restaurant once. The meat had melted like warm butter in his mouth. But prey you brought down and ate fresh so the fear still pumped through it as you tore and ripped and sucked it down? Much better. Feeding while the food was still alive and trying to fight you off? Excellent.

  But the rush from fresh vampire meat and blood? Best of all.

  Our blood is a drug, he thought.

  Misericordia smiled, remembering the sweet taste of Cutter’s spleen. He looked around the lobby at his ravenous tribe as they pulled clothes from the dead to feed. The floor was slippery with wasted blood.

 

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