SURVIVORS OF THE DEAD: FROM THE ASHES (4 page)

BOOK: SURVIVORS OF THE DEAD: FROM THE ASHES
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Harry actually thought he saw some disappointment at the
time, as he was certain they had some training scenarios planned around his experiences. He had no intention of reliving his FTO days, nor of imparting pearls of wisdom from the
dinosaur age
. He had found that had been a most liberating decision, and thus actually enjoyed the program immensely.

A
lthough the physical conditioning required just about did him in. “Those fucking instructors are offering up some pay back for not letting them use me as a visual aid,” he had said after one particularly grueling day of hand-to-hand demonstrations in which they used Harry as the assailant, of course, and generally kicked his ass.

What
was ironic was that after years of resistance, he had also accepted the rank of Reserve Sergeant just eight months after being sworn into the Reserve Unit.


It’s about time you finally took on some responsibility for a change,
old man,
” Captain Lester Tomey, who supervised the Reserve Officer Unit, had said with a huge grin while handing Harry a star with the word SERGEANT engraved on the upper rocker, with the word RESERVES directly below.


Screw you very much,
sir,”
Harry had replied good naturedly as he had accepted the star from his friend of many years.

Lester
Tomey and Harold Lancaster had gone through the academy together and even worked a car together several years later until Les had been promoted to sergeant.

“Who the hell names their kid
Lester?”
Harry remembered kidding with him when they’d first met and been teamed up for take-down drills.


They were probably the same kind of folks who would name their kid
Harold,
” Les had immediately replied, laughing and then adding, “Let’s get pizza later.” Harry knew they would be friends.

Les
promoted up through the ranks to captain, and the word had been he was in line for the next commander position. Those positions rarely opened up, but Les was patient, and he had made it clear on more than one occasion that he would retire only when they dragged him out “kicking and screaming and tossing my ass through the door.”

Harry
unfortunately had not spent much time with him over the past several years, as life goes on and all, but he had always wished him well and much success. He hoped Les had survived the April 1st onslaught, or that he had at least died quickly and was not a zombie somewhere.

After the promotion, which really only meant Harry got a new star
with a different word on it, he began to work a higher than average of twenty-five to thirty unpaid hours per month. Normally assigned security at special events or demonstrations for crowd control, he had also been utilized many times in regular street patrol. That had thrilled him, and although his reserve status did nothing to increase his pension, or pay him an additional salary, he nonetheless felt that old sense of fulfillment he had missed after retirement.

Harry’s thoughts at the time, finding himself back in police work,  had run along the lines of
the more things change, the more they stay the same,
but as it turned out the decision to enter the Reserve Unit had ultimately saved his life. Being a Level I Reserve came along with a California PC 832 peace officer status, allowing him to carry, keep, and maintain firearms much more easily than as a retired cop, especially in the City and County of San Francisco with its progressive anti-gun laws. Harry
clearly
understood now what being
truly screwed
would have meant on April 1st when the madness began.

 

6

 

Pulling his thoughts back to the present, Harry stood up from the bed and walked the few short steps to the heavily curtained window. He had installed the curtains several years ago to block light from entering the bedroom when he had still worked the graveyard shift. It had been hard enough to get use to sleeping during the day without sunlight flooding the room, reminding him that a normal working person should be awake.

Now the curtains kept any light from the battery
-powered lantern he had been using, not to mention the laptop and small television he had brought into the bedroom, from escaping the apartment and announcing his presence. Carefully pulling back a small section of the curtain, he looked upon a scene straight out of a horror movie. He said with a smirk, “Wonder what the new owners will do about a little zombie infestation.”

Nothing in his
twenty-five years of dealing with the worst humanity had to offer could have prepared him for what he had been witness to since this all began. There were at least fifty of those
things
directly below in the street. They were going in and of buildings, which were obviously breached, pounding on doors of those they could not get into, all the while emitting that incessant moaning.

It was also apparent that the screaming he heard this morning
had been from more survivors being found. Zs were pouring into the building across the street. Harry clearly saw, even in the dim morning light, fresh blood on the steps and sidewalk of the building that had not been there the day before. The bodies of the permanently dead kind lay everywhere, in every conceivable position, most mutilated beyond recognition.

Between the dead bodies and the zombies, the smell was horrendous
, even through the closed window. Harry had come to know that odor intimately while responding to welfare checks on the elderly or the home bound left forgotten. The odor was of death personified; it permeated clothing, and assailed the senses almost to the point where you could taste it. Clothes could be cleaned, but that indescribable stench would linger in the nose for days. This was what once again assaulted Harry but a hundred fold; that, and an underlying trace of smoke.

Looking up slightly at
the skyline above the buildings with concern and a real sense of dread, he saw the glow of the city burning. “This must’ve been how the folks felt who witnessed the ‘06 fire,” he said, closing and sealing the curtain.

Although
the fire might possibly destroy the City, he was fairly confident that it would do so at a much slower rate due to the automated fire suppression built into buildings along with fire retardant construction materials required by the vastly improved building and planning codes since the 1906 earthquake, and the resulting fire that had destroyed the majority of San Francisco east of Van Ness Avenue to the Bay.


The City will surely die, but at least it will take out a large percentage of those fucks as she does,” Harry thought. The spread appeared to be moving from the south side north, and although still south of Market Street, he knew his time frame to remain in the building was quickly closing.

“And I hate packing!”
he said sarcastically.

It
had only taken two days before the local TV stations went off the air and Internet service began to fail. But during those two days, there had been all manner of speculation as to what had happened. A virus, “Maybe.” Terrorist act, “Probably.” Some super-secret government experiment gone wrong? “Who knows?” Every religious zealot known seemed to be crawling out of the woodwork spouting, “
End of Days has arrived; repent as God’s wrathful judgment is at hand.”

Then ‘
respected government experts’ began describing medical reasons to explain why they were seeing “
people suddenly becoming extremely aggressive, attacking and appearing to bite and consume their victims, with many of the victims then getting up and joining the hordes of infected”—
and something about a mutated form of “
Super Rabies
”?

The local
TV stations had field reporters in every part of the City, all with endless rhetoric about the events unfolding, although much of their descriptive had just been superfluous information. The old adage “
a picture is worth a thousand words
” was never a more true observation based on what was transmitted through the camera lens those first couple of days. Crowds of people, either pursuing or being pursued, running through the streets or pouring from buildings, with the infected indiscriminately attacking anyone they could get their hands on.

During all this
, on a banner scrolling at the bottom of the screen from the San Francisco Office of Emergency Management, instructions were being relayed that all citizens should evacuate to one of the listed “established safe zones”. Other officials from the police department were encouraging citizens to remain wherever they happened to be, to lock all doors and windows, and that “help would be dispatched to your location as soon as possible”. Too many mixed messages to effectively save anyone.

Hastily
assembled police skirmish lines, replete with officers uniformed in complete riot gear, were unable to hold back the hordes of people they had sworn to protect. Verbal commands were useless, as was the use of non-lethal weapons such as batons, pepper spray, or tear gas. Even less than lethal weapons – shotguns with rubber composite rounds – proved ineffective. At the point somebody decided to finally use lethal force it was obviously too late. The infected overwhelmed the lines in mere moments.

The
officers surviving an onslaught at one particular line were seen regrouping to establish a new line, until there was simply nobody left as they finally succumbed to the massive size of the zombie horde. Most of the mauled cops, like many other victims of the zombies, were seen standing up, with all manner of horrendous injuries, to join the exponentially growing ranks of the infected.

Harry
knew that even if he had been able to respond to the call out he had received on April 1st he would have also been killed, or worse yet, become one of the infected. That fact did little to ease the sense of deep loss for friends and the horrific way in which he’d watched them die live on television.

Every part of the
City, from the Financial District, Russian Hill, Telegraph Hill, the Avenues, South of Market and all other districts, were in complete chaos. Harry watched as those “established safe zones” that had been set up in Golden Gate Park, AT&T Park, and a couple of other centralized locations were overrun by the infected.

The
local TV channels showed the same horror until the field reporters either abandoned their cameras as the hordes were closing in on their locations, or who were ripped apart waiting too long to join their fleeing colleagues. More than one reporter was heard screaming just off camera, while surely realizing their dream of a Pulitzer for their “career changing exposés” had been flushed. “Let’s get the fuck out of here!” A few made it, but most did not. Finally the stations just stopped broadcasting.

 

7

 

Thanks to the large water storage tank still used on the roof to service the apartment building, there was enough backpressure to shower. Although the water was cold and the pressure low, Harry did not care. Standing under the weak and frigid water, the events of the past several days inundated his thoughts.

In particular
, he thought back to an interview he had seen on GNN, which was the only network still broadcasting by that particular time, just about a week after it all began. Fortunately, right before the batteries in his small portable 10” television had drained out completely. An interview that helped wake him to the stark realities of life in this new evolving world, and motivated him to do the one thing he had not given much consideration to until that moment. Survive!

There had been a GNN helicopter flying in
the Southern California area, between Los Angeles and San Diego he thought, apparently reporting on conditions as seen from the air. Harry had no real interest in what was happening some four hundred miles from his own Hell, but something caught his attention. He saw a large helicopter rising up to hover next to the GNN chopper. Turning up the volume, he listened intently to the exchange.


Yes, Fox, the helicopter on that strange ship has taken off and is climbing towards me now. I am unsure of their intentions, but I will wait here to see if they are friendly. Wait a moment. It looks like I’m receiving a radio message on the emergency frequency. Hold on while I patch you all into the conversation ... Yes, this is Chet in the GNN news helicopter over the Port of Long Beach, who is calling me?”


Hello there, Chet, this is Commodore Allen of the Sovereign Spirit, flag ship of the Survival Flotilla. I’ve been watching your broadcast and thought it would be a good idea to come up and meet you. Maybe we can set the record straight before you and Mr. Rusher jump to any wrong conclusions. I’m flying the helicopter moving into position next to you and I’d like to invite you down to conduct an interview, if you’re interested.”

“Yes, Commodore, we at GNN are very interested in interviewing you.
But can you tell me and our viewers something about what you are doing right now? We are broadcasting live, so you can consider this an interview if you like.”

“Sure, Chet, we can do an interview over the radio if you like.
It shouldn’t take too long. Go ahead and ask your questions.”

BOOK: SURVIVORS OF THE DEAD: FROM THE ASHES
8.24Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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