White Ash on Bone: A Zombie Novel (6 page)

BOOK: White Ash on Bone: A Zombie Novel
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During one of the many hospital renovations, the ladder had led to the roof.  One of the renovations enclosed the ladder inside, and the new wing was constructed over it. Kimberly could hear other people calling for help through the walls as she climbed up the ladder. 

The top of the ladder ended onto a section that had once been the roof. Now, it might have been a balcony from the dungeons of the Phantom of the Opera.  Kimberly found a door on the balcony, the doorknob locked from her side.  Light poured through the bottom of the door.

Kimberly opened the door and found herself in another utility closet, but the closet featured a window outside of which was the top of the hospital and the landing pad.  She had only been up here once, but she knew outside the closet was a small lobby with an elevator and stairwell to the landing pad.  She opened the door and screamed as an axe swung at her face.

"No" she managed to scream.

Dr. Carson pulled the axe back at the last moment. 

"Oh thank god, Kimberly."  Carson took her in his arms and their lips met.  The couple shared stories of their respective escapes.  Dr. Carson had managed to get to the room unscathed except for a wound to the arm.  He neglected to tell her the wound was from a bite.

"We should be safe up here, for now,” Carson said. “I jammed all the access ways.”  They settled in on the floor to wait.

"Does your arm hurt?" Kimberly said.

"Yeah, but I think you can help me take my mind off the pain," he said.  The young girl smiled, and he pulled her in close for an embrace.

 

Chapter Four

 

Captain Anderson's assault to rescue the VA left ten of his men dead.  To his new understanding, this meant they were part of the group of zombies trying to kill him.

They had no trouble getting to the VA, but once inside the problems started.

The guardsmen quickly found their rounds nearly worthless against the onslaught of ghouls.  Five veteran guardsmen were lost right from the outset.   The surviving VA hospital staff urged the guardsmen up a stairwell to a hastily barricaded second floor. Anderson’s platoon managed to break contact with the undead, but not before another five of his men fell.

Of a hospital staff usually numbering around three-hundred, forty-one managed to reach the safety of the barricade.  The rest were either trapped in other parts of the VA, or among the undead.

Captain Anderson got busy on his field radio trying to reach military assets on Guard frequencies. Andersen knew that the 911th Air Reserve in Pittsburgh might have one of their C-130's in range.  He used his call sign, "Guard Whisky Six-One," and asked for anyone to respond.

"This is Air Force Tango Foxtrot Delta, we read you Whisky Six."

"This is Captain Rick Anderson, Pennsylvania National Guard.  The city of Butler is a major Charlie-Foxtrot.  We are held up in the Butler County Veterans Administration Hospital; we are under siege on the second floor.  I am officially requesting an over-flight of Butler City to confirm crisis and request boots on the ground."

"Roger that ground-pounder, we will bump your request up the ladder, hang-tight. Tango Foxtrot out."

Anderson breathed a sigh of relief; at least someone up the chain of command would know to listen in.

Sergeant Ryan Winters sat in the next room over listening to his field radio.  He had it tuned in to civilian emergency frequencies.

"
EOC to all ears, Penn Township reports that the only way to stop the things is to shoot them in the head.  The EOC should no longer be considered an evacuation point we are being over-"
The communication from the emergency center abruptly ended.

###

 

 

Sulla heard the final broadcast from the EOC center in the news chopper.  After rescuing the two people from the hospital roof, Sulla directed the chopper back over town.  Then he swung them over to his men’s position on Route 8.

Halfway there, Sulla saw an explosion from the direction of Sunny View hill and location of the EOC.

Sulla directed the helicopter to fly over the EOC.  The pass over of the area revealed a gas line spewing fire into the air.  A pickup truck had run into some kind of junction for gas pipes.   Bodies littered the ground, several upper torsos stirred in pieces of their former selves. 

“The driver,” Sulla said, “must have lost control of the vehicle while being attacked by those things.  The explosion then traveled by pipe to the EOC.” Smoke poured out of the dying building.

Sulla’s heart sank for the people killed inside. Their efforts to organize a response would be badly missed in the coming hours.  Sulla broadcast the demise of the EOC from the chopper, and then directed the helo back over Route 8 to his men fighting the undead.

“My god, look at how many are coming down that road,” Peggy said. Heading south on the highway, thousands of forms moved.

Sulla got on the radio and asked George to get a hold of the roadblock turning traffic around south of the township.  He needed them to find a couple of big-ticket items, and he needed them as fast as possible.  He also wanted George to contact the Governor and find out why in the hell the military hadn’t been called in yet.

The chopper landed at the bridge barricade now well into its construction in the middle of the bridge.  From the ground Sulla noticed the sun hanging just above the edge of the horizon.  Great, it’s going to be dark real soon he thought to himself.

###

 

 

"Sir, this Sulla guy on the radio says the EOC just got toasted from a gas line explosion," Sergeant Winters said.

Captain Anderson's radio chimed in its own report. 
"This is Tango Foxtrot Delta to Whisky Six One; we are a go on fly by. ETA in 10 minutes."

"Copy that, Tango Foxtrot,” Anderson said. “Whisky Six out."

"The EOC's last broadcast was to waste these things in the head, if you want them to stay down," Sergeant Winters said.

Anderson looked out the second story window at the growing crowd of undead gathering on the VA lawn.  Anderson grinned at one of his soldiers and nodded at the window.  "Bust one of those windows out. Let’s do some experimenting in the name of science and the guard," Anderson ordered.

The soldier picked up a chair, and smashed it against the window.  The glass cracked but didn’t break.  The second swing brought a satisfying shower of glass falling away from the chair.

Captain Anderson brought his M-16 up and sighted in on a man with a bat-man shirt ambling across the lawn.  Anderson lined up the green dot of his scope right over the man's heart and squeezed the trigger.  In an instant, the round exploded from the weapon and cut through the air to impact dead center in the target’s heart.

The man took a step back and then kept coming.  It looked up into the window, attracted to the noise.

"I guess," Sergeant Winters said," that science says that fucker’s either wearing body armor under that shirt, or he's some kind of fucking monster, Sir."

Anderson realigned his aim to the ghoul's head and fired a second round.  A red mist puffed from its head, and he toppled over backwards.  He didn’t get up or move.

"That may be Sergeant Winters, but the Guard says stay the fuck dead," Captain Anderson said.

The guardsmen cheered in approval.

"Listen up," Anderson shouted.  His men and the VA survivors quieted down.  "We know how to kill these things, but we don’t have the ammo to take them on from here.  The longer we stay here, the more of those things we’re going to have to take on to get out.  We are moving out in 5 minutes to get back to depot and rearm.  Lace your shit together, and make sure we don’t lose any survivors on our way out."

###

 

 

Three minutes from Butler City, Air Force Tango Foxtrot Delta could see smoke on the horizon.  This particular C-130, boasted the title of being a gunship. The craft had Gatling guns mounted on each side of the fuselage.

Up until sighting the smoke, the crew thought that the whole thing might have been a joke being played on them.  The Co-pilot adjusted the plane’s radio to try and catch some civilian emergency broadcasts.  They caught a couple of minutes worth of chatter from Penn Township.  It sounded like the Township was as trying to organize emergency efforts near the Butler County Airport.

The pilot brought the gunship in lower to get a better visual on their pass of downtown Butler.  The C-130 broke the horizon over the valley top and got its view of the Butler County Court House.  The building was in full blaze.  Dozens of other fires burned around the town.

"Fuck me," the co-pilot said.

To their left a massive fireball reached into the sky.  From their vantage point the explosion ripped out with a shockwave that tore into the surrounding buildings leveling them to dust.  The plane bounced on the shockwave of the blast, but the pilot maintained control.

"This is gun crew one.  We got visuals of movement on the ground. We might have equipment failure back here; we see movement from multiple civilians but negative on thermals." 
The crewmen then added,
"Hold on sec, thermals are working fine.  I see all the fires, and some civs are normal who are waving from rooftops.  What the heck?   The people on the ground that are trying to get at the rooftops show no heat; what is going on down there...?"

###

 

 

Phil Malone worked for the Butler County Sheriff's department as a deputy. He was on duty the night when the unknown prisoner needed locked down.  The prisoner didn’t to respond to orders and kept trying to attack the deputies.  They threw him in the drunk-tank where he instantly beset his fellow inmates.

Malone, and two other deputies, rushed in to break up the fight.  Malone knocked him to the ground and tried to get a chokehold on the guy.  The guy's teeth pierced the skin of Malone's arm and sunk in to the bone.   The prisoner then pulled away and tore out a huge chunk of meaty flesh.  Blood gushed from a severed artery.  In pain, Malone let go of the guy, but the prisoner kept at him.   The crazed guy took another bite out of Malone's arm.  The other deputies tried to restrain the prisoner, but he was on top of Malone chewing the shit out of him.

A newly-arrived guard managed to pull Malone out of the holding cell while other deputies subdued the prisoner. 

"Shit, we need to get Malone to the hospital," the guard said. 

Malone felt dizzy from the loss of blood and passed out.

He spent the rest of the night in the ER at Butler Hospital.  The doctor did his best to stabilize the bleeding.  He gave Malone a transfusion for the loss of blood, and cleaned the wounds.  The staff informed him that he had lost a good deal of muscle tissue around the wounds.  He would need skin grafts at the minimum.

Malone felt tired, but his wife sat at his bedside. Their relationship had been on the rocks for months.  The two of them had been discussing divorce the day before the incident.  Her presence made him feel loved.  “Perhaps we can patch things up,” Malone’s wife told him while holding his hand in the hospital bed.

In the morning, Butler Hospital transferred Malone by ambulance to another facility.  They moved him to Oakland Hospital in Pittsburgh.  There, he could receive better treatment in preparation for future surgeries to his wounds.

Around lunchtime, Malone fell into a comma.  Five hours later he flat lined.

Chapter Five

 

Rex sat at the stone topped Casino bar drinking a Coke. He wondered where the future was taking him and his wife Ginger.  His watch showed 15 minutes until his appointment with the Casino manager.  Rex’s eyes drifted down the length of the bar. He lost conscience thought as he stared into oblivion. 

"Excuse me, what are you staring at?" a young woman rebuked him from two seats down. 

Rex realized his gaze bore into the girl.  She had long blonde hair, brown eyes, and full lips covered in black lipstick.  Her lips were a little pouty.  She was decked out in a tight skirt, hose, and a spaghetti-strap top, everything in jet black.  On the blonde’s right bicep there appeared to be some kind of zombie tattoo; she had the Goth thing going on. 

"I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to stare at you,” Rex said. “I was kind of dazing off.”

"That’s okay," she said, giving him a slight smile and the possibility of a flirtatious encounter. 

"I have to ask though,” Rex said.  “Is that a zombie on your arm?"

"Yes it is," she replied with her smile growing a hint more. 

"So what made you decide to go with a zombie tattoo?" Rex said. 

"First off, it’s not real; yet. It’s just airbrushed," she said.  "Second, I hope it’ll remind me never to let my guard down when it involves dealing with the living dead," she said with a giggle. 

Rex smiled at her, and took her in again.  The dark Goth-clothing was a contrast to the blond hair and sweet attitude. 

"Art or theater major?" Rex asked. 

"Neither, I’m a med-student," she said. 

"They let you dress like that for medical school?" Rex asked. 

"No,” she said. “But I’m on break, and I enjoy going out on a limb.  It makes me feel like a teenager.  Now I have a question for you. Do you always look so serious?"  

BOOK: White Ash on Bone: A Zombie Novel
12.69Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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