HVZA 2
Hudson Valley Zombie Apocalypse
Linda Zimmermann
www.gotozim.com
www.hvzombie.com
Eagle Press
Chapter 1
“If anyone finds this, please bring it to West Point, if you can, so the people I care about will know what happened to me. I’ve lost a lot of blood from the bites and head wound, I’m all alone with very few supplies, and I don’t know if I’ll survive.”
The woman was writing in a black and white college ruled notebook with a green pen that had a bank logo on it. The boy who originally owned the notebook, Dylan, had most likely died in the house, along with the rest of his family, about a year earlier. As a doctor, Rebecca “Becks” Truesdale, was all too familiar with the various stages of human decomposition, and since the start of the zombie apocalypse in June of 2012, she had plenty of corpses to examine. In fact, she had witnessed enough death, and undeath for that matter, to last a lifetime.
When she broke into the house on Sparrow Lane, Becks wasn’t exactly thrilled to find five corpses, but with her ammo dangerously low, it was infinitely better than running into five hungry zombies. Her wounds had been too severe to allow her to dispose of the bodies at first, so she had to be content to spend a couple of weeks recuperating to get enough strength to toss the father, mother, and three children out the dining room window. Fortunately, the corpses were completely dehydrated so they weren’t terribly heavy. But they were rather brittle, so a few limbs, ears, and fingers broke off here and there as she was dragging them through the house and pushing them through the window, but she eventually disposed of all the bits and pieces.
Becks didn’t see any signs of bites or self-inflicted wounds on the bodies, so the cause of death for Dylan’s family was not immediately evident. However, it was just one more painful reminder that death came in many forms, especially after the government collapsed and everyone was left to fend for themselves. Perhaps it had been the flu, pneumonia, food poisoning, or carbon monoxide from the large kerosene heater in the middle of the living room. Becks favored the latter, as it appeared the family all passed peacefully in their sleeping bags huddled around that heater.
“If I don’t make it and I’m found someday, a first-year med student will be able to determine my cause of death in a heartbeat. There’s an ugly gash in my scalp and a probable fracture of the left parietal region (that’s a cracked skull for you laymen). Then there are about a dozen bites on my hands, arms, shoulders, and legs. Hopefully, I had enough Eradazole that I won’t be going zombie, but several of the wounds are still infected from those bastards’ filthy mouths.
“I’m going to have to try to find more antibiotics in the other houses in the neighborhood, but I’m still too weak and dizzy for any serious fighting. I’m just going to have to take my chances, though, because if these wounds go septic, I’m screwed.
“And the worst part of all this, is that I’m stranded somewhere in New Jersey! Oh, the horror…”
“There’s a term my parents used that really disturbed me—‘snug as a bug in a rug.’ As a rather fastidious and medically inclined child, I recoiled at the thought of disease-carrying insects taking up residence in our carpeting. My mother was always so pleased that at a young age I took it upon myself to vacuum the entire house on a regular basis. But she never realized—and I never told her—that I was only doing it to suck all the little vermin into oblivion.
“However, as troubling as that phrase was to me in my youth, as I look back to the last year and a half at West Point, safe and secure from the outside world of the zombie apocalypse, those words are the first things that come to mind about my peaceful existence there during that time. I was, indeed, snug as a bug in a rug—albeit a highly fortified, military rug.
“There was no fear for my personal safety. I was well fed, with excellent accommodations (in other words, hot showers, flush toilets, and a soft bed), my lab was state-of-the-art, and I was working with my old friend Dr. Philip Masterson, and a host of other talented scientists and doctors. Granted, many of the people I loved, including my ex-husband and best friend, Cam, were still ‘out there’ fighting the good zombie fight, but the Hudson Valley of New York was becoming more secure every day, so my anxiety level on their account was minimal.
“Most importantly, we were making great progress in the war against the ZIPs (Zombie Infection Parasites). We had a new formulation for Eradazole that now made it effective for up to one month after getting infected. The QK series of drugs—which had saved my life, but almost killed me—were being phased out and replaced with the Triton series (so named as the parasites originated in the ocean), which finally managed to eliminate mature parasites in the mid-phase stage of infection without causing severe harm to the host. However, we still didn’t have anything that would help the poor victims of full-blown, end-stage infection. A bullet to the brain was still the best course of action in those cases.”
Becks put down her pen and notebook so she could gingerly readjust her position on the couch. Her head was throbbing and a lot of the bite wounds were inflamed and very painful. However, the thing that bothered her the most was the memory of how she received those wounds. Perhaps “haunted her” would have been a better term.
“Becks, you’re going to be jealous!” Phil Masterson announced in a sing-song voice as he practically skipped into the lab early one morning in October of 2014.
“Did you get the last of the frozen strawberries?” she asked, craning her neck to see him without removing her arms from the biosafety cabinet in which she was running some samples.
The farms that had been created at West Point had produced such an abundance of fruit and vegetables that much of it had been frozen—something that was possible because the military post had a variety of solar and alternative energy solutions that literally made it a bright beacon in a very dark world. It also made it the last bastion for ice cream thanks to its freezers, and the dairy cows that grazed on the parade field.
“Better than that,” Phil said with a genuine wink, not just one of his involuntary eye twitches that were rare these days, now that his son had mostly recovered from the ordeal at the family farm. Life was as good as it could get, under the circumstances.
“The only thing better than strawberries is chocolate, and if you are holding out on me with a chocolate bar, or even an expired box of Count Chocula, then you and I are going to have a problem.”
“Even better than chocolate,” Phil whispered, as if the walls had ears.
That made Becks stop what she was doing and spin around in her chair to face him with a puzzled expression.
“Come on, stop torturing me. Spill it,” Becks demanded, gesturing with her gloved hands for Phil to come out with it.
“I have just two words for you—road…trip,” Phil said, practically bursting at the seams.
“What! No…n-no way!” Becks stammered with excitement. “Where are you going? When are you going? Can I come, too?”
As wonderful as life had been inside of West Point, they hadn’t been off the base in months, and only then it had been on official business to help set up a lab and clinic in the Albany area. It was one of the rules to which they all agreed before signing on to the project. Everything in the world of the zombie apocalypse had a price, and the price for safety and security was your freedom.
Of course, these weren’t the typical American freedoms everyone once enjoyed—you were still free to go anywhere, but now scavengers were also free to rob and murder you, and zombies were free to eat you. Still, there was a certain level of adrenalin that Becks missed from her
days of fighting to survive. It may sound crazy, but living on the edge was quite a rush; as long as you were able to keep alive, of course.
“Sorry, Becks, it’s just me, some scientists and techs from other departments, and about a two dozen army personnel. They’re setting up some labs for research, and Eradazole and Triton manufacturing, at the Picatinny Arsenal in New Jersey, and they need someone to get them up and running.”
“You lucky bastard!” Becks shouted, tossing a box of Kimwipes at his head to get that smug expression off his face. Phil dodged the awkward projectile and then looked even twice as smug.
“Hey, cut that out or I won’t bring you back a nice, shiny, new gun,” Phil said, waving a finger as if to a disobedient child.
Before the apocalypse, the arsenal had been the headquarters of the United States Army Armament Research, Development, and Engineering Center. As insurgents and terrorists were beginning to be replaced by the undead as the biggest threat to national security, rumor had it USAARDEC started developing all kinds of anti-zombie weaponry, not the least of which was some sort of sonic disruptor rifle that literally blew apart the nexus of zombie parasites that formed throughout the human nervous system. It supposedly sounded and looked like something out of Buck Rogers, and everyone who had heard the rumors was just itching to get their hands on the futuristic technology.
“And no, I’m not bringing you back a disruptor,” Phil added, as if reading Becks’ mind.
“You’re no fun anymore,” Becks said, extending her lower lip in an unmistakable gesture of pouting.
Despite her disappointment, she was more than happy to help Phil get supplies together and compose some protocols for the various stages of manufacturing and research. Of course, standard procedures were already documented in a manual, but things changed so rapidly that last week’s data and operating procedures were often ancient history. They worked late into the night before Phil was scheduled to depart, but everything was finally ready to go and packed into the transports. Becks’ pillow felt particularly good as she settled down and fell asleep almost immediately.
“Wake up! Becks, wake up,” a voice said in the fog of her sleep-deprived brain.
Even months of security behind the walls of West Point couldn’t erase the ingrained fight-or-flight response of the outside world, and when she realized a hand was on her shoulder, Becks reacted as if a zombie was attacking. Fortunately, the jab from her fist just glanced Phil’s jaw and he staggered back in time to avoid the thrusting foot that threatened a very sensitive area of his anatomy.
“Becks, for Christ’s sake, it’s Phil!” he yelled, as he stepped all the way back into the hall until she came to her senses.
“Phil, what the hell?” Becks said, rubbing her eyes. “You scared the crap out of me. What’s wrong?”
Giving it another few seconds to make sure she was fully awake, Phil gingerly took a few steps back inside her room.
“It’s Phil, Jr. Last night I told him I was going away for about a week and he freaked out. I’ve been trying to calm him down, but I’m afraid he’s going to have a relapse,” Phil replied, referring to the catatonic state in which the boy had been after witnessing his mother, sister, and grandparents slaughtered and eaten at the farm. It had taken a very long time for his son to even speak again, and longer still to start acting in any manner approaching normal.
Phil’s twitch had also returned, and Becks could see the anguish and fear in his face.
“Do you want me to go to your quarters and stay with him?” Becks asked, placing a consoling hand on his shoulder.
“No, I want you to go to the arsenal instead of me. They’re leaving in an hour.”
Becks was showered, dressed, packed, and standing by the transports at 0430, a full half hour before they were scheduled to pull out. To say she was excited was an understatement—it was like the last day of school, the first day of vacation, and Christmas all wrapped into one. And damn, but didn’t it feel good to strap on her faithful Smith & Wesson Model 629 again, full of those hefty .44 Magnum cartridges that made Cream of Brain Soup when she plugged a zombie in the head. Not that she needed the relatively little pistol when traveling with the mighty army convoy, but old habits do die hard.
The convoy consisted of two large trucks full of supplies, a smaller truck with scientists, techs, and heavily armed soldiers, and four armored Humvees—two at the front and two at the rear—each with one of those lovely .50 caliber machine guns. Becks missed driving her own Humvee with its potent .50 cal, but as she wasn’t going to need it at West Point, she had given it to Cam, who would definitely be putting it to good use.
Sweet-talking her way into the passenger seat of the lead Humvee, Becks trembled with nervous anticipation as they left the gates of West Point. There wasn’t much to see before dawn by the headlights on the wooded sections of highway, but as they descended Route 6 with its commanding view of the former Woodbury Commons shopping center, Walmart, and all the other retailers clustered in the area, Becks saw the faint flickering of campfires. It appeared that survivors had made the parking lots into base camps, with large numbers of RVs formed into circles, like the wagon trains of the old west.
It made sense, as this was the point where two major highways met—the New York State Thruway running north and south, and Route 17 from the west—and the driver explained that these camps had become bartering stations for food, weapons, tools, and whatever was left to loot out of the stores. Consumerism was not dead, even in the midst of the zombie apocalypse!
As they headed south on the Thruway, she wondered if they would see the large packs of zombies that used to clog the roads, but she didn’t see even a single straggler. Becks was beginning to wonder why they needed all that firepower in the convoy, until they came to the Suffern checkpoint. Where cars once zoomed onto Interstate 287 at the border with New Jersey, now stood a heavy steel wall with guard towers. Becks looked at the driver with a shocked expression.
“New Jersey is pretty much a no-man’s land, ma’am,” the smooth-cheeked, twenty-ish Sergeant Tim Colaneri said. “We are hoping to start pushing south next spring, while the troops at the arsenal start moving north and east. But right now, it’s worse here than it ever was in the Hudson Valley.”
“I guess that makes sense, given the population density,” Becks said as her palms began to sweat. Trying to lighten her own mood she added, “Then again, I always thought New Jersey was just one step away from an apocalypse on a good day.”
They both laughed, but it didn’t help allay the rising fear in her gut. What was she thinking? Had she completely forgotten about the endless days and nights of terror? Had she forgotten what it was like to literally run for her life, to watch others die horrible deaths, or to be so close to a zombie that you could smell its stench? Perhaps leaving the safety of West Point wasn’t the smartest thing she could have done. There was something to be said for being a bug in a rug.
Interstate 287 was zombie-free, as military patrols drove its length from Suffern to Route 80 in Parsippany at least once a day. Just off the highway was another story entirely. Stately homes that once housed affluent New York City commuters were now burned-out shells, vandalized and left to the elements, or boarded up and reinforced like small forts.
Last year, Becks had seen messages scrawled on cardboard and bed sheets hanging from apartment windows in Manhattan—desperate cries for help that never arrived—and now she watched, heartbroken, as they passed more homes and businesses with similar signs, tattered and weather-beaten.
“Children infected, please help!”
“Wife in labor, need doctor.”
“Surrounded by zombies, for God’s sake someone help us!”
“No one left but me, is anyone out there?”
There were a few, however, that had a morbid sense of humor.
“Had I known, I never would have paid my taxes.”
“Annoying neighbors all turned zombie. 3 Cheers for the apocalypse!’
&
nbsp; “Mother-in-law ate wife…Best day of my life!”
After a while, Becks stopped reading the signs and concentrated on looking for signs of life, and the undead. She thought she saw a pickup truck driving on a local road under the highway, but she couldn’t be sure, as she only caught a glimpse. She was sure of one thing, though; just about every town and road was thick with packs of zombies.
“Isn’t anyone fighting them down here?” she asked Colaneri.
“No, ma’am, at least not so as it’s had any real effect on the dirty scummer population,” the young driver replied, eyeing a distant pack with contempt.
“Say what?” Becks asked in amusement. “Pray tell, what is a scummer, and when did we start using that term?”
“Oh, sorry, ma’am,” the sergeant apologized, as if he had just used a four-letter word. “Don’t exactly know what it means, but we had a British instructor at the Point who kept calling the zombies ‘dirty scummers,’ and me and some of the boys just picked up on it.”
“You were a cadet?” Becks asked in a more serious tone.
“Yes, ma’am!” he replied, sitting up straighter in his seat. “All I ever wanted to do since I was a kid was graduate from West Point, like my dad and grandpa. And I was only a year away from my dream when the scummer shit hit the fan—oh, excuse my language, ma’am. Could have kept taking classes, but there comes a point where Duty, Honor, and Country are best served with a gun.”
“Amen to that!” Becks said as she lovingly patted the holster that held her revolver.
Becks admired his dedication and youthful zeal. She was also envious of his seemingly boundless energy—energy she used to possess before the scummer shit hit the fan. Had she grown so much older in just over a year? The mirror in her quarters certainly indicated that was the case.
For the remainder of the drive, Becks and Sergeant Colaneri talked about their lives BZA (before the zombie apocalypse), which inevitably led to discussing the fate of their respective families. Becks considered concealing the fact that her parents had taken an overdose of sleeping pills when they discovered they were terminally infected. However, as they did it to prevent being a burden to her, she relayed the event as it happened, and spoke with love and pride at their ultimate sacrifice.
HVZA (Book 2): Hudson Valley Zombie Apocalypse 2 Page 1