Authors: Daniel Kelley
“Now, you all tell me,” he said, his accusatory tone from their first meeting returning, “how in the
hell
did those
things
get into Stamford? Part of the reason this move had to be made now is that the government was still isolated, didn’t have any kids in there who might have already been implanted. We did it wrong the first time, didn’t explain that it was the technology we were battling.
“The plan this time was to let this infection run its course, keep all of
you
holed up, and try again. I even have a new homepage designed for the site. ‘If you are alive today, know that is true only because you are
not
a slavish devotee to a power button. Technology is the root of all evil, and the ones who didn’t realize that are now dead, undead or dead again.’ But that depends on you — the Lamberts, Madisons of the world, the ones who should be in charge — being alive.
“So I’ll ask again. How the
hell
is it that we are gallivanting about Cape Cod instead of comfy-cozy in Stamford, sipping on a water bottle?”
Once again, Donnie was cut off before he could answer, this time by Michelle. She had barely moved throughout the old man’s story, but now she whirled around in her seat, her weapon pointed at Salvisa’s face.
“For people who did what they did to try to protect
people
, you sure as hell don’t know anything about them,” she said, venom in her voice. Donnie pulled the car to a complete stop. “You
really
thought people were going to be okay leaving their kids to die while they sat comfortably in luxury at
work
? You really thought there was
no
chance someone might just happen to bring their daughter to work today? There was no chance of that? You just flipped a switch, figured, what, you and Lambert could repopulate the earth yourselves? Think again, you old bastard. Setting yourselves up to be the last two men on earth
still
won’t get any women to fuck you. I’d let the world end first.”
Michelle held the gun in Salvisa’s face. It shook as they sat, though Donnie figured it was now more from anger than grief. Either way, while he agreed with the anger at the man in the backseat, he didn’t exactly love the idea of her firing a shot in their closed vehicle. If they were going to kill Salvisa — which he was not opposed to — he wanted it done outside of the car.
“Michelle,” Donnie said, working to calm his own voice. “We can’t do this here.”
“What do you mean?” Michelle asked, though her head didn’t move an inch, and neither did the weapon.
“He’s a son of a bitch,” Donnie conceded. “He deserves to have you shoot him. But we need him. Right now, he wants to live just as much as we do, and he’s already come in handy. We need him.”
Michelle stared Salvisa down for a full ten seconds. Then she reached into the back and grabbed the backpack, laboring to pull it into her own lap. She turned to face forward, then spun back again, her gun at the ready. “Give me your weapon,” she said.
Salvisa, who hadn’t acted surprised or scared in the face of Michelle’s anger, nodded and handed his pistol up front. “May I point out,” he said, his voice sounding almost amused by the proceedings, “that, while I certainly side with this young man that killing me is a poor idea, that, without any of my weapons or gear, I’m likely to be something more of a hindrance to your progress than an aid? Seems to me I’m more an appetizer than an assassin in my current, unarmed condition.”
“You can have a weapon when you need a weapon,” Michelle said, her voice cold. “Not before.”
Salvisa nodded, even though Michelle, facing forward, couldn’t see the action.
“So how is this one supposed to end?” Donnie asked. “Why aren’t you standing there at the switch, like you’re supposed to be?”
Salvisa shrugged. “Not as many people these days. Figured everyone would kill off the Z’s themselves, or they’d be able to hole up long enough to outlast them. You unplug your laptop, it can’t get juice, the battery drains. You take away a Z’s source, they stop too. Week, give or take, of no human food, and there aren’t Z’s anymore. The switch is still there, but we didn’t have any plans to shut it down. Just let it run its course. And I wanted to make sure Stamford was okay.
“My damn car hadn’t broken down, I’d be there by now, too.”
“For what?” Michelle asked, scorn in her tone. “To say hi to an empty shell of a building? If you want to get to Stamford, you can get the hell out of the car right now.”
For a second, Salvisa actually seemed to consider Michelle’s offer, but ultimately shook his head. “Thank you, I believe I’ll stay.”
Donnie, though he wished Salvisa
had
decided to leave, was at least satisfied that he had curtailed imminent violence. He put the car back into gear and continued driving. They were drawing ever closer to Morgan College.
Chapter 10: The Door to Death
Andy could tell his daughter was shocked, but he didn’t hate the teacher’s idea. If there was a rear entrance, one that they could feel comfortable getting out unnoticed, then he figured torching the building was just about their best chance to escape, especially considering Brandon’s injury and the fact that, outside of Andy, it was a novice crew. When Lowensen, Simon and Celia returned from their sojourn with as many boxes of liquor as they could carry and explained the plan, Andy found himself nodding along.
He had questions, though.
“Where does this exit lead?”
Lowensen almost smiled. “That’s the best part,” he said. “It’s underground, and it lets out on the opposite side of the parking lot. Seemed like the best place to have an exit — somewhere that would lead to a quick getaway. We go out the hatch, and we’re not fifty feet from your car.”
Andy nodded. It was true; a special exit that let them out in the middle of nowhere would be worthless. “And where do you propose we go from there?”
That was the stumper. It was Simon, hanging back timidly, who came through with a suggestion. “There’s always that old building,” he said with a stutter. “That one the old man was talking about earlier. The old… Walt Mart.”
Andy smiled. The boy was close, and his suggestion was better than anything the adults had come up with. “Okay,” he said, nodding at Roger’s son. “We’ll head to the Walt Mart. Now,” he continued, turning back to Lowensen, “how do we do this?”
Lowensen looked around the room. “Well,” he started, “we need to figure out the best way to get them in here and start the fire without burning ourselves, too.”
“You and I do that,” Andy said. “The kids are going to be at the exit, waiting.”
Lowensen stopped and looked at Andy, as though he wanted to be one waiting by the back door, but ultimately nodded. “Okay, the kids will be back there waiting. I figure one of us can open the door a little bit and come back down the stairs before they’ll really be on our tail. That’ll give whoever opens the door a few seconds to run.”
He scanned the room again before continuing. “Now, what I think is best is to stack as many desks and chairs and whatever else flammable in the middle of the room, with as much liquor as we can use in there too. Pour some on the stairs, too. The floor. Basically lighter-fluid the whole goddamn room. When they come down the stairs, one of us stands opposite the burnables to get their attention. You know these things, Mr. Ehrens. They won’t go around the pile. They’ll try to climb over, crawl through. They don’t do well in figuring out ‘around’; they just try the shortest possible distance.
“When enough of them have gotten in here, and lord knows how many that actually is, we light the fire. I figure we’ll both need lighters, get the fire going as quick as possible. Make sure it’s lit, then we haul ass out of here, to the exit.” He was gaining confidence as he spoke. “Anything goes wrong, the kids are right by the door. They can still get out even if we don’t.”
Andy nodded. It was as good a plan as any. Without a word, he started piling desks and chairs in the center. Everyone was awake now, and the kids — save Brandon, nursing his sore ankle — pitched in as well. Stacy and Travis ripped the ornate curtains from the wall, layering them in and around the desks. Within twenty minutes or so, they had made a substantial enough mass in the center, with some assorted liquor bottles scattered and poured about as well. Simon and Celia had been back to the lounge five times, getting as much of the liquor to the classroom as possible. They also soaked every bit of spare clothing or fabric they had with alcohol and spread those throughout the pile, close to the side that would need to light the fastest when the time came.
When Andy was satisfied with the burn pile, he turned to Lowensen. “Now,” he said. “Take us to this mystical exit of yours. I want to know where I’m running to.”
Lowensen nodded and wordlessly left the room, heading down the same hallway Andy and Roger had traveled earlier. The group all followed, Andy and Simon helping Brandon limp along. He could put some of his weight on that injured ankle, but not enough to run — barely enough to walk.
They convoyed through the hallway, past the cafeteria, past Lowensen’s office, past the teachers’ lounge. They kept walking in a direction that, Andy agreed, led back the way they had come, toward the parking lot and his car. The concrete floor and relative lack of decoration, he figured, was a mixed blessing. It would slow the fire’s spreading significantly, that was true, but any zombies that managed to get through the fire would be able to chase them largely unhindered.
Finally, they turned a corner and were faced with a dead end, with only a door before them. The door was marked “FACULTY ONLY,” with smaller words underneath that said “No students under any circumstances.” Lowensen pulled a key from his pocket and unlocked the door, opening it to reveal only a small extension of the hallway, maybe ten feet deep, that ended at a ladder bolted to the wall. Lowensen climbed the ladder until he was level with the ceiling and pushed upward a couple of inches. He looked around as much as he could before climbing back down.
“They’re out there,” he said. “A lot of them. But there aren’t many right around here. And those that are will be attracted to all the noise and activity at the classroom door. By the time we’re ready to get out of here, we ought to be fine.”
Andy nodded. He removed Brandon’s arm from around his neck and herded the kids as close to the ladder as they could get. “You all have weapons, right?” he asked. At their nods, he continued. “Good. When the zombies get into the classroom, I’m going to fire a couple of shots. Get their attention as best as I can. You ought to be able to hear that from here. When you hear the shots, give us two minutes. Two minutes, and that’s
all
. If you don’t see one or both of us in two minutes, you
run
.” He turned to Simon. “Keys are still in the car. If we aren’t in that car, you get yourselves to Walt Mart. Don’t wait for us. If we haven’t made it in two minutes, we aren’t making it. Son, you get yourselves to Walt Mart and you take care of my daughter.”
Simon nodded solemnly. “Yes, sir,” he said.
Andy looked from one teenager to the next, making eye contact with each of them. They returned the look, but each looked terrified. That was good, he thought, as he’d prefer they be scared than full of false bravado. He and Lowensen left them there and headed back the way they had come.
“You really think this will work?” Andy asked the teacher when they were out of earshot of the kids.
Lowensen shook his head. “No idea. It’s risky as hell, but I don’t have a better idea. And I feel like it’s my fault we’re in this situation, so I have to do something.”
Andy agreed with that sentiment, but didn’t say anything. Lowensen made a quick detour into the teachers’ lounge when they passed it, coming back out seconds later with two lighters and two cigarettes. “I don’t smoke,” he said, “But I feel like there’s never been a better time to do something that’ll calm my nerves.”
Again, Andy agreed, so he took the second cigarette from the teacher and lit it, inhaling slowly and deeply. It was his first cigarette since the mid-2000s, years before the zombie outbreak, but the cigarette fit back into his hand neatly, like an old glove. He had quit smoking for his health, but he realized now that he had more pressing health concerns. One cigarette wouldn’t hurt.
They returned to the classroom. As they entered, Lowensen grabbed a bottle of bourbon from the last case they had. He looked at it admiringly for a moment. “One thing you can say about the post-zombie world,” he said with a small grin. “
All
our alcohol is finely aged now. Not exactly the way it was meant to be, but they bottled this stuff in 2009.”
Andy, too, grabbed a bottle, then another. He went back to the stairwell and started pouring them on each step. He hoped this would lead to the zombies getting some further incendiary on them as they descended. At the least, he mused, it might make them more likely to slip as they chased. Lowensen kept a tight grip on his own bottle.
Those bottles empty, Andy went back to the case and saw that there were two bottles left. He removed those as well, and moved to the corner of the room that was 180 degrees around the burn pile from the entrance. He placed one bottle on the floor and held the other in his right hand, while he clutched his gun in his left. When he was in position, he nodded to the teacher.
Lowensen moved over to the stairwell and stepped to the edge of the area where Andy could see him. He stopped and looked back to Andy, who nodded again. Lowensen tucked away his gun for a second, and used his free hand to open his bottle of bourbon. He tilted it to his face, taking a quick plug from the bottle. He made eye contact with Andy after his drink was finished, and shrugged, re-capping the bottle.
Andy couldn’t exactly begrudge the man who was about to open the door to death one drink, so he remained stony-faced. Lowensen climbed the stairs, disappearing from Andy’s sight. He could hear the teacher climb, hear him stop once a few steps up, hear him start again. Finally, Lowensen climbed enough steps that Andy figured he must be at the top. For a full twenty seconds he heard nothing. Eventually, though, Andy heard the unmistakable sound that indicated the crossbar on the door was being raised. The door creaked loudly as Lowensen pushed it open, but the creak was brief, as Lowensen likely had opened it only a few inches.
Then Lowensen’s steps predictably sped up. He hurried back down the stairs, stopping just short of the spot where Andy would be able to see him again. From there, Andy heard him call out.
“Hey!” he cried. “Hey! Down here, you crazy-eyed fuckers!” A second later, Andy heard the sound of glass shattering, and figured Lowensen must have hurled his bottle to the top of the stairs, trying further to attract the dead’s attention.
The teacher wasted no time then, sprinting back into the classroom and toward the door to the bowels of the building. “They’re coming!” he cried, knocking what desks weren’t in the burn pile down behind him, blocking the path from entrance to back door.
It was an unnecessary warning. Mere seconds after Lowensen ran into the room, the first zombie showed up, tumbling down the stairs and surely breaking one of its arms in the process. It showed no signs of pain, of course, and pushed itself to its feet just as another zombie came barreling down. The two collided and both lost their feet again. Soon, though, zombies were making it down more sure-footedly. Finally, they untangled from one another, and one turned and entered the classroom, the room that Andy had thought would be the safest place in the world for his daughter.
The zombie was hideous, its eyes blanched white and one arm reaching outward. Its shirt, which had one time been khaki-colored, was soaked with blood over nearly its entirety, except for a few spots around the right shoulder and down the arm that were torn to shreds, presumably from the bites that had left the creature in its current condition. As a result, its right arm hung limply at its side, a grotesque reminder of what had once been a human arm, as the rest of the creature charged forward. The thing that made Andy’s stomach really turn over, though, was the fact that he recognized this lead zombie.
It had once been Roger Stone.