Read The Pandemic Sequence (Book 1): The Tilian Virus Online
Authors: Tom Calen
Tags: #apocalyptic, #survival, #plague, #Zombies, #outbreak, #living dead, #walking dead, #apocalypse
“Shit,” Tim exclaimed as he pumped the gas pedal and kept turning the key. The Tils were at the truck now, and they banged relentlessly on the glass, their bodies covered in blood and sores.
“Let’s get the heck out of here,” came a frantic scream from the rear, the voice indistinct among the screams and howls of the Tils. As if in reply, the engine roared to life.
Glass shattered beside him as Tim put the truck into drive. Mangled arms grabbed at him, nails scoring his face and chest. As he screamed, Mike began firing at the ravenous infected that were attempting to rip the mechanic from the driver’s seat. The truck moved steadily forward, then, in his struggle, Tim’s foot slammed into the gas pedal sending the SUV crashing into the Tils, pinning them against the car in front of the truck.
Blood splattered the interior, as the mechanic slowly lost his struggle with the horde of grasping hands. With a final scream, he was pulled through the driver’s window, neck snapping as his head struck the doorframe.
“
NO!”
Mike screamed as he lunged towards the door.
Paul held him back shouting, “He’s gone, Mike, he’s gone! We gotta get out of here!”
In a daze, Mike saw the pinned Tils before him, other infected climbing over them. He heard the screams and gunshots from the backseat, shotguns ripping apart the bodies of the Tils surrounding the truck. Hands shaking, Mike gripped the blood-slick steering wheel. He shifted the truck into reverse and slammed on the gas. With a tight cut of the wheel, he angled the truck free of the other vehicles and plowed through the dense mass of infected. The Blazer bounced heavily as it veered off the paved road and onto the grass.
Mike Allard’s voice strained as he tried to shout over the hysterics that filled the room. He had been unable to get a signal from the television since the screen went blank ten minutes earlier. Understandably the students in the room had reacted with screams, tears, and panicked confusion.
You’re not doing much better
, he thought to himself. He tried his cell phone again, but like others in the room, he could not get a signal. Sheriff Cartwright had gone out to his cruiser to radio the station, as his two-way was also dead. As each student reported an inability to get a cell signal, Mike at first assumed the towers were overloaded, but a voice inside him was beginning to suspect that the cells, radio, television and internet were perhaps intentionally shut down. For what purpose, he did not know. As he tried again to calm the students, the familiar squeal of the emergency broadcast system blasted from the television’s speakers. The tone was quickly followed by a mechanical voice.
This is not a test. The federal government has issued a warning for the country. Please remain indoors at this time. Structures with minimal windows and doors will provide the best security. The National Guard has been activated to address the situation. Again, this is not a test.
The message repeated several times before the screen returned to static.
“Mr. Allard, what do we do?” asked Derrick Chancer, worry cracking his normally steady voice.
In response, Mike moved over to the windows. The courtyard beyond the glass was dotted with slow moving figures. Their shambling movements were identical to the man from the news report; as he tried to digest the situation, three gun shots ripped through the late afternoon air. The sound caused him to jump back as he saw two of the figures in the courtyard fall to the ground. The people still standing began to rush towards the police cruisers. Five officers, with guns drawn, stood behind their patrol cars. Mike could see the flares of gunfire as more shots rang out.
“Guys,” he said urgently, “help me get these bookcases in front of the windows.”
Four students, Derrick among them, joined Mike in his effort to slide the bookcases to the windows. The wood made a screeching sound as it slid along the linoleum flooring. In the distance, he could hear glass shattering, followed by screams.
The front office
, he thought. With the windows secured, Mike quickly made his way into the hall. The gun shots had now moved indoors, and he could hear the commanding shouts of the officers. With steady back-stepping, the officers came into view.
“Get those kids out of there!” one shouted over his shoulder to Mike. With instincts and adrenaline racing, he raced back into the room.
“Everyone, follow me. We’re going upstairs.”
The students ran out of the room and made their way to the stairwell at the other end of the hall. As the last few exited the class, Mike saw one of the officers get tackled by a frenzied woman. Her hands and mouth were ripping into the officer. With several shots of his sidearm, the officer killed his attacker and dragged himself clear of the others now pouring into the building. Mike ran to the stricken man and pulled him towards the stairs. He could hear the windows of his classroom smash, followed by the crashing sound of the bookcases crumbling to the floor.
We’re going to die
, his voice screamed in his head.
Reaching the stairs, Mike reached down to lift the officer, whom he now recognized as Sheriff Cartwright. The man had large gashes in his chest and face. The blood that before was only splattered on his sleeve was now indistinguishable from the red that stained the shirt entirely. Struggling to lift the large sheriff, he grunted with exertion. Barely lifting him to his shoulder, the sheriff began to convulse wildly. With the strain too great, both men crashed to the floor and Mike’s head smacked loudly on the tile. While still trying to assist the sheriff, he looked back down the hall and saw the remaining officers falling back quickly as they were overrun by the crazed attackers.
As suddenly as it began, the convulsions that overtook the sheriff ceased. During another attempt to lift him, the sheriff’s hands grabbed at Mike’s shirt. Struggling to fend off the attack, he stumbled backwards as the sheriff rose to his feet. The man towered before him, eyes wild and primal growls ripping from his mouth. The sheriff crouched into what could only have been called a pouncing position.
Mike looked to his sides as he continued to slide himself away from the sheriff. His eyes locked onto the man’s service revolver that had fallen a few feet to his left. Grunting, he dove for the gun just as the sheriff launched himself. With a crash, the big man met empty floor, and Mike turned quickly, revolver in hand, and squeezed the trigger. One round smashed into the sheriff’s shoulder. The shot staggered the man, but he steadied himself and again began to move towards Mike. The revolver felt heavy in his shaking hands as he cocked and aimed again. The second shot ripped through the sheriff’s chest and he crumpled to the floor.
His hearing now dulled from the shots, Mike stood slowly, the world a fuzzy haze around him. With a start, his vision cleared as he heard another shot fired. Looking towards the far end of the hall, he realized that the remaining officers had fallen and had been enveloped by the mass of blood-drenched attackers. One, a male in what appeared to be his early teens, looked up from his feeding and his eyes locked onto Mike. The creature howled in rage and soon the others that filled the hall raised their heads, spotting him standing alone some fifty feet way.
He turned quickly as the attackers leapt into action. The blood that covered their clothes and shoes caused them to stumble on the slick surface of the floor. He reached the top of the stairs just as the others began their climb. The frantic gesturing of the students signaled to him.
The faculty room
, he thought to himself as he sprinted the length of the hall. The children screamed warnings as the crazed creatures breached the second floor behind him. With a grunt, he smashed into the arms of the students who pulled him inside. Michelle slammed the door behind them, while others strained to slide a vending machine in front of it.
Exhaustion overcame him as the adrenaline left his body. His vision again began to blur as he slipped into unconsciousness. He could hear the worried students in the distance, their voices seemed miles away. As his eyes closed, he heard the crashing sound of bodies slamming against the barricaded door.
* * *
His body ached. That was the first sensation he became aware of as Mike slowly stirred from his sleep. The surface under him was hard and cold. He soon could make out the faint sounds of weeping.
“Mr. Allard?”
The voice caused him to jump and he immediately brought himself to a seated position. His eyes took in the familiar surroundings. Students huddling together in the corners of the faculty room.
“Mr. Allard, it’s Derrick. Are you ok?”
Turning to the voice at his left, Mike asked urgently, “What happened? Is everyone okay?” he asked the student urgently.
“We’re fine. You’ve been out for an hour or so,” Derrick informed him.
Rising to his feet, Mike remembered the last sounds he had heard before blacking out. He quickly turned to the door. The crashing and growling were absent.
“Are they gone?”
“We don’t know. They kept trying to get in but twenty minutes ago they stopped,” replied Jenni Calente, offering him a bottle of water. Michelle Lafkin stepped forward. “No one has been able to get a signal on their phones.”
Mike looked around the room and saw the fear in the eyes of those before him. Natural risk takers and self-believing immortals, the teens in the room now cowered like mice before a snake, and they were looking to him for answers. Trying his best to assess their situation, he made another visual sweep of the room. The twenty by thirty foot, second floor faculty lounge had a small bathroom in the right rear corner, no windows and one door to the hallway. That door was now blocked by a large snack food vending machine. To his left, Mike saw the beverage machine, its glass front smashed open.
Smart move
,
kids
, he thought,
at least we have food and water
.
“Okay, this room is good,” he said.
“Derrick picked it,” Jenni replied, her voice holding a bit of pride for her boyfriend.
“Always thinking with your stomach, eh, Derrick?” Mike laughed.
“Yea, he usually thinks with something else,” called out one of his buddies from the football team.
At first nervously and perhaps a bit forced, the room soon filled with laughter.
It wasn’t long before more jokes were told, more comments made, and the survivors found themselves holding their sides from the mirth. The stress of the day’s events had been channeled into a new emotion.
It was Jenni, however, that brought them back to harsh reality, asking, “Mr. Allard, what do we do?”
Pensive for a moment, Mike turned to the barricaded door and replied, “We need to see what’s out there.” As he spoke he picked up the revolver from the large table that sat in the middle of the room and discovered there were two bullets remaining.
“Give me a hand with the vending machine,” he directed as he shifted his weight against it.
“Mr. Allard, no way. You’re not going alone. Those things could still be out there,” Derrick stated with a hint of authority.
Mike appreciated his concern—he was not fully keen on the idea of investigating the hall alone—but he knew that with just the one weapon, any that followed him would be unarmed and vulnerable.
“We only have the one gun, Derrick,” Mike began to explain, but was interrupted by Jenni.
“The table,” she said simply.
Everyone turned to the table, then back to her inquisitively.
“The table legs. Take them off and use them as clubs.”
Before Mike had a chance to object, the students flipped the table and used a pocket knife multi-tool to unscrew the table’s legs from its top.
“You have a knife at school?” the history teacher said to the tool’s owner, Blaine Grimson. Mike realized the absurdity of the comment, having slipped easily into school official mode.
With his usual sarcasm, the senior with the military crew cut looked towards Mike Allard and replied, “Big picture, Mr. Allard, big picture.”
Within minutes, the table was disassembled and Derrick, Blaine, Jenni, and another student with whom Mike was unfamiliar, stood armed with their makeshift clubs. Secretly feeling guilty, he relented and agreed to accept their assistance. Three other students cautiously moved the vending machine from its spot in front of the door, careful to make as little noise as possible.
“As soon as we are out, I want you guys to block the door again,” he instructed those that were remaining behind. Taking a deep breath in a failing effort to still his nerves, Mike motioned for one of the students to slowly open the door.
Fearing the same onslaught he had so narrowly escaped, the five stepped out into the hall. The doors to the other classrooms in the pod were closed, and no lights shone from the rooms. The circular hallway was deserted, walls and floor covered in blood were the only evidence of the things that had chased him. Placing a finger to his lips to instruct silence, Mike began to lead them towards the staircase at the opposite end of the pod. The halls in the school were not long, but crossing them now seemed an eternity. The four students were fanned out behind him, with Blaine and Derrick diligently watching behind them.