DEAD AGAIN
(book #1 in the Zombie Diaries)
George Magnum
Copyright © 2011 by George Magnum
All rights reserved. Except as permitted under the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior permission of the author.
This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return it and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, organizations, places, events, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictionally. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
CHAPTER TWELVE
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
CHAPTER NINETEEN
CHAPTER TWENTY
CHAPTER TWENTY ONE
CHAPTER ONE
Commander Jacob Peterson awoke to the shrill sound of his emergency beeper. He opened his eyes, disoriented, trying to remember where he was. He surveyed the small room and saw a TV screen flickering static, and saw blinds swaying from a humming air conditioner. He then looked over and was surprised to see a petite, platinum blonde woman, early twenties, sleeping beside him, nude on top of the sheets. Their bodies were entangled with one another, at peace.
Not anymore. The beeping wouldn’t stop, and Peterson reached over, untangled himself, and grabbed it. He knew what the beeping meant, but he checked anyway, as if just maybe, this one time, he would catch a break.
No such luck. The blinking numbers on the beeper were all too familiar--another emergency--another mission. Peterson took one look back at the sleeping beauty, her curves, her soft skin. Absorbing her with his eyes, he wished he could get back into bed with her. But the beeping meant serious business.
Shit.
He dressed quickly, his body muscular, scarred with small circular indentations—bullet wounds. He left quietly, not waking her.
Tossing a black satchel over his shoulder, Peterson stepped out from the ranch suburban home. The house was picturesque, as was the entire neighborhood. Well-groomed yards, blue skies and room to breathe.
I would settle down her, Peterson thought, if I had a different life.
He walked to his Ford pickup, but then stopped abruptly. Looking up and down the block, he detected an eerie silence. In the middle of the road, a red tricycle was on its side, its front wheel spinning slowly in the wind. Peterson looked up at the trees. Not even the birds were chirping.
He shook it off. Too many years of combat had begun to haunt him, stirring odd sensations from time to time. Lately it felt as if he were watching himself in the third person, as if his life was not his. And then, as quickly as it came, it passed. He’d heard that feelings of surrealism were a sign of combat fatigue.
That made sense. He had been at war his entire life—if not with special operations, then with himself, his childhood, his father. It was an uphill fight. Sooner or later, even the strongest men can cave—but Peterson refused to accept this.
Just keep looking forward, he thought, and everything will be okay.
As he wound through the community’s newly-paved roads, the low rumble of his pickup’s engine disrupting the quiet of the neighborhood, he reached into his satchel and felt through its items: a 9mm pistol; clips of ammunition; a federal I.D. card, and finally, what he was searching for: his government-issued, secure cellphone.
Peterson flipped it open, and as he did, it sped dial automatically.
He waited.
No answer, then static. He shot the phone an odd look. It was an important tool of his trade and had always been reliable.
Peterson suddenly looked up, back to the road, and slammed on his brakes.
Before him, shattered glass and skid marks tore a trail over a front yard, leading to a silver Honda minivan, turned upside down. Dark smoke rose from its belly. Ten feet from the van, a child lay flat on her back. Motionless, her pink dress was matted with blood.
Peterson stared at the wreckage before him.
No people. No sounds. No commotion.
Struggling through his initial shock and battle fog, he slid out of his car and bee-lined to the little girl.
A layer of blood stuck to the girl’s body and matted hair. Her face was sickly-pale, her lips cracked, and her eyes were open—staring into the abyss. For Peterson, it was an all-too familiar sight. He had seen it in the faces of a hundred comrades, and a hundred enemies. It was the face of death. Whatever happened, he had arrived too late for this little girl.
If only out of respect, he reached down and felt for a pulse. As expected, her flesh was cold and already hardening. No pulse. This girl was long dead.
Peterson immediately turned his attention to the van. Staring back at him from the driver seat were the wide eyes of a middle-aged woman. She was upside down, with the top of her head pressing against the ceiling. Her eyes blinked rapidly, and it seemed that she was trying to gain some sense of her surroundings, but unable to.
Peterson leaned down beside the smashed window.
“Can you hear me?” he asked gently, although he did not expect the woman to respond clearly. He recognized the signs of a concussion and knew too-well the disorientation which accompanied it.
“Yes,” she responded, in a dazed whisper.
“What is your name?” he asked in a soothing voice.
“Elizabeth” she responded, “my name is Elizabeth.”
“Elizabeth, my name is Jacob Peterson. You’ve been in a car accident. Try not to move. I’m going to help you.”
Words trembled from the woman’s lips, “My little girl. Sandra.”
Peterson looked over his shoulder at the little girl, and hoped the woman hadn’t seen her.
“She’s okay, miss.”
He struggled to open the car door, but it caught on the cement, jammed under the van’s pressure. He needed the jaws-of-life to get her free; he knows it was fruitless wish.
“I’ll get you out. Just hold on” he said, speaking more to himself, as he hurried to his vehicle.
Peterson rummaged as quickly as he could through his backseat, finally finding a crowbar. He then hurried back to the van, ready to try again—but as he neared it, he suddenly stopped in his tracks, frozen in shock.
Before him, the little girl—the one he knew was dead—was standing. Alive. Facing her mother, just a foot away.
That’s impossible, Peterson thought. That girl was dead.
The mother’s face lit up with a look of relief.
“Sandra baby, Mommy’s here,” the mother said in an encouraging tone, her voice coarse and weak.
In a strangely mechanical manner, the mangled child, her back still to Peterson, walked towards her mother. Peterson watched, too shocked, for the first time in his life, to know how to react.
The little girl crouched down, getting close to her mother.
That was when Peterson saw the mother’s face contort from joy to fear.
“Baby?” came the mother’s suddenly terrified voice.
Before Peterson could react, the child leaned in, as if to give her mother a kiss, but at the last second, leaned over and instead bit a chunk of flesh out of her mother’s. She chewed and swallowed. . .and then bit down again .
The mother screamed with a scream that would raise the hairs on the world’s toughest men. Peterson was used to sounds of agony, sounds of death, but in all his years, he had never heard a sound like this. He felt his skin grow cold.
The little girl leaned in again, as if to bite her again, and this time, Peterson burst into action. He ran towards them, and upon hearing him approach, the child suddenly turned, revealing her face. It was a sick pastel, and her eyes, sunken low into their sockets, were filled with madness. She stared at him like a rabid animal and she chewed and swallowed the remaining flesh in her mouth.
Peterson stopped in his tracks. He didn’t back away, even though he wanted to. Two decades of elite military training and countless combat missions had hard-wired his mind to face and defeat any threat.
Yet, now, he was frozen and didn’t know how to react. He stood there, facing her, not sure what to do—not comprehending how any of this could be possible. Was he dreaming?
Suddenly, there was the rev of an engine and the sound of screeching brakes, as a police car pulled up, skidding to a halt.
Two police officers leapt out. The lead cop, a tall, brawny guy, wielded a 12-gauge shotgun, and the other, a young rookie, aimed his 9mm Glock pistol at Peterson.
“Get down!” the lead cop shouted at Peterson.
Peterson recognized the look in the cop’s eyes: panic. He knew that if he didn’t move, he’d get shot.
He dove to the ground, and as he did, the police opened fire.
Rounds of bullets from the 12-gauge shotgun and 9 mm pistol ripped into the child and her mother. The 12-gauge hits the little girl like a cannonball and ripped a baseball- sized hole through the back of her skull, and blew her face off.
The cops kept firing, unloading every round of ammunition they had, until their weapons stopped with an empty click.
Peterson looked over and saw that, over the smoking barrel of their guns, the little girl and her mother had been blown into bits of pulp and tissue. The cops turned their attention to Peterson.
“Are you okay?” asked the lead cop.
“Okay?” Peterson stumbled.
The rookie was suspicious. “Have you been bitten?”
“Bitten? Bitten by what?”
The world was becoming surreal again to Peterson, and he fought for his bearings. It was uncommon for Peterson to have this many episodes in one day, or even one month.
The cops looked at each other, communicating without words.
“I don’t understand,” Peterson said.
“What did you see?” the lead cop asked.
Peterson turned and looked at the remains of the girl and her mother.
“I saw a car accident. I saw that girl. She was dead or, at least I thought so. She got up. She bit her mother’s face…” Peterson could hardly believe his own words.
The second cop demanded an answer: “Have you been bitten?”
“By the girl?”
“By any of them?” the cop snapped.
The lead, brawny officer was more cool-headed, and took control.
“What you witnessed is not an isolated event. We’ve already seen about one hundred of them, some in the next county over, a large group just half a mile from here…and now these two.”
He pointed at the girl and her mother, and his voice changed into a scared, slow drawl, “Something is spreading. Fast.”
Peterson saw that the rookie was unsettled, still anxious for an answer to his question. Their eyes met, and Peterson’s thoughts wandered.
She was mortally wounded. She got up. She was biting her mother. It’s not isolated.
Suddenly, the rookie’s question made horrifying sense.
“No,” Peterson answered, “I have not been bitten.”
The rookie’s face relaxed, as did his posture.
He became forthcoming. “It’s all over the news. It’s happening everywhere. Nobody can make any damn sense of it,” he said, as he holstered his pistol.
The lead cop stepped in, “Get to a safe place, sir, and don’t waste any time.”
A crackling voice came from inside the patrol car’s two-way radio, and without looking back the cops jumped into the car. The lead cop yelled, “Board yourself up too,” and the patrol car skidded away.
It was strangely silent again, and Peterson looked at the remains of the girl and her mother.
And then, as if on cue, his beeper sounded once again.
CHAPTER TWO
Peterson rode in a UH–60 Black Hawk helicopter as it cut through the air, its fiberglass, four-blade main rotors pumping, vibrating the passenger cabin. Peterson was wearing his out-of-place civilian clothing amongst the three other soldiers in the cabin, all dressed head to toe in full combat gear.
Peterson checked his watch, and realized something wasn’t right.
He spoke into his headset, and had to shout over the noise: “You’re heading in the wrong direction, pilot! I’m going to special Command Warfare Center.”
“Sorry sir, you’re being routed,” the pilot hollered back.
“Routed? To where?”
“Confidential sir, sorry.”
Peterson sat back, beaten. He had an angular face, chiseled out of years of combat, his eyelids were tired and heavy, making his eyes intense blue slits. He knew the routine, but it still annoyed the hell out of him. It didn’t matter how much blood and sweat he’d sacrificed for his nation—in the end of the day, he knew, you either give orders, or you follow them.
The irony was that policymakers were almost always wrong. Peterson’s instincts demonstrated he knew a hell of a lot better than most of his superiors, no matter their rank.
One of the soldiers, an 18-year-old kid, leaned over, yelling over the chopper’s noise.
“What force are you with, sir?”
The kid was a cherry, or he never would’ve asked. Peterson just shot him a sideways glance.
“National security,” Peterson said in a flat voice, not inviting further conversation.
But the kid wouldn’t give up.
“What do you make of what’s going on sir? Do you have any more information?”
“If I did son, wouldn’t I know where we were going?”
As the chopper sailed over the Virginia landscape, Peterson took advantage of their bird’s eye view. Interstate 95 was congested with bumper-to-bumper traffic, and state trooper sirens lit up as they attempted to make headway. Peterson was mesmerized at the never-ending line of vehicles. It just didn’t seem real.
Peterson closed his eyes and willed himself to believe that this was all just a bad dream. His fantasy life had become more vivid lately, at times, even overwhelming. He drew on it. He saw himself in a sailboat, docked in clear blue waters. He envisioned a beautiful woman, carrying his child.
A second chance at life.
The young soldier, though, interrupted Peterson’s thoughts.
“The news reports said it was a viral infection, sir. Do you think that’s true?”
“It can’t be viral, because I heard it’s not contagious,” chimed in a voice.
It came from a soldier, in the back of the cabin, a twenty-year-old black man, chewing a cherry cigar, with a tattoo of a dragon on his right arm.
“The TV said that it’s spreading fast. How can that be if it’s not contagious?” the young soldier snapped back.
“All rumors, man. Can’t believe a word they telling us,” the black man said, speaking with his hands.
“I heard the infected don’t have heartbeats,” the young-faced private retorted, “that they aren’t breathing, but they’re getting up, rising, and attacking people.”
Sitting quietly in the back of the cabin was an overweight soldier. He unwrapped a candy bar. His hands were trembling.
His voice was so soft that Peterson could barely hear him: “I saw it.”
“Saw what?” the young private yelled over the thumping rotors.
With a surprising anger, the heavy seat soldier screamed back, “I SAW IT!”
“Saw what, fat man?” the black soldier jabbed.
The heavyset soldier’s anger turned to fear.
“My friend, Patricia May. She was as dead as can be. She was scrambling cross the street and then I saw her get hit by an ice cream truck. It just damn nearly cut her in half. Her innards were all over the cement, god shoot me down. I tried to help her, but she was long gone. No pulse, no nothing.
“Then, a few minutes later, she opened her eyes again. Her mother, Mrs. May ran over and touched her. But then Patricia did something awful. She turned around and bit her poor momma’s arm! Oh, my good lord. She was dead. I swear she was dead!”
The men in the chopper fell silent, as the overweight soldier wiped tears from his eyes. Abruptly, his voice changed and was replaced by a terrible wisdom, as if he were placing a curse on the world:
“Hell has emptied and the devil is coming our way.”
*
Peterson hung on as the Black Hawk took a sharp turn, its pumping motors taking them at high speed to some destination. Peterson wanted to see what the TV broadcasts were saying. After his incident in that white-washed suburban neighborhood, he’d had no time to pause. At first, he felt as though he had seen enough, had gotten the picture. And the picture terrified him.
Now, however, he was hungry for more information. He also needed to drown out his fellow passengers bickering. He took out his iPad from his satchel, plugged in his earphones, and tapped the CNN icon. “Internet connection weak,” read a pop-up window.
The satellites must be overwhelmed.
Finally, CNN came up. The headline read: “Take Shelter.”
But Peterson didn’t want to read—he wanted to view. He tapped the screen, enlarged the window, and a female journalist appeared, reporting from the field, a microphone in her hands with a CNN logo. She was pale, frantic, her head darting from side to side, alert for danger. She was sweating as she reported into the camera:
“This is Betty Baretta reporting from the small town of Winsbur, Michigan. Here at CNN, we believe in the freedom of the press, and we believe that the federally-mandated media blackout is unconstitutional, and we are devoted to continuing our coverage. My cameraman and I are bringing you uncensored footage of the situation here in this small Michigan town.”
Through the eyes of the video camera, Peterson watched pedestrians run frantically in the streets. A small fire burned from the second story of a grocery store, its black smoke darkening the sky. A mob of people appeared and someone smashed the front window of the grocery store with a brick. The crowd yelled and charged inside.
“As you can see, panic has overtaken this town. There is wide-spread looting of food and water. Also, an out of control fire burns, with no firefighters in sight.”
Behind the anchor woman, a police officer appeared. He drew his pistol and opened fire, shooting at something outside of the camera’s view. The image shook as gunshots rang out. Then the camera swung and focused on a man, covered with blood, limping towards the cop. The cop fired three rounds, hitting the man in the chest.
The bloodied man was halted for only a brief moment, though, and then continued to walk toward the cop.
The anchor woman spun around to watch: “As you are seeing….we are seeing….there is an infected man in our vicinity,” she said, her tone filled with fear and naïve excitement.
The cop pulled his trigger again, but his gun was empty. The camera zoomed in on the infected man. He was mauled, part of his face torn, exposing cheek bone and muscle tissue. Peterson stared in amazement: it was seemingly impossible that this man was on his feet and walking after taking three bullets to the chest. His skin was the color of a corpse, and eyes almost black, soulless.
The cop snapped a new round of ammo into his police-issued 9mm pistol and opened fire with only feet to spare before the infected man reached him. He fired a spray of bullets, and they tore through the infected man’s neck, spraying blood. Then, one hit the head. The back of the infected man’s head blew open, sending out chunks of brain.
Betty Baretta screamed at the site. Out of the camera’s view, Peterson heard more shrieks, and then a yell: “There’s too many of them—too many!”
The camera spun and showed a frightening image: closing in on Betty Baretta were three infected.
Suddenly, the iPad screen went blank: “Internet connection lost. Unable to connect to a server.”
Peterson immediately wished he hadn’t watched. Somewhere in the back of his mind there had been a voice telling him that everything would be all right, that what he experienced really couldn’t be happening everywhere. In the far reaches of his mind he had hoped beyond hope that this phenomenon was simply not real.
But CNN brought the situation home, and, finally, Peterson realized: we were at war.
CHAPTER THREE
Peterson held on as the Blackhawk rose over the horizon, banked a turn, and descended rapidly. It swept over what appeared to be a bunker. Only a cement roof was visible. He looked down and saw soldiers with assault rifles guarding the perimeter.
The chopper drew close to a landing pad, its blades thumping, the sound of its powerful turbines overwhelming. It lurched forward, kicking up a tornado of dust.
Peterson looked out and saw, waiting for them, a squadron of soldiers standing on the rooftop, with a single figure standing out before them. General Moore. Fifty years old, with austere, cropped graying hair, his rigid uniform and rows of stars classified him as a man not to mess with—and Peterson knew that was the case. Wind from the chopper whipped his Moore’s face, but he seemed to barely notice. Moore’s squadron of armed soldiers bore assault machine guns and stood in formation around the landing zone. Someone shouted commands, absorbed by the thumping blades of the chopper.
Peterson felt more under-dressed than ever as he jumped out of the chopper in his civilian clothes. He briskly approached Moore, giving him a smart salute. Moore gave a hard stare back, and saluted.
*
Peterson, Moore and several soldiers stood in a large, steely elevator as it descended quickly, Sub Level 2. . .Sub Level 3. . .Sub Level 4. They stood silent, Peterson was uneasy by Moore’s side. He respected Moore, but knew him to be an unforgiving bastard who only saw things one way: his. He knew it better not to initiate small talk, unless he wanted to be chewed out.
Finally, the elevator came to a halt and the two of them stepped out.
A controlled chaos greeted them. Glass-plated partitions separated super computers, and a display of strategic images flashed on immense glass screens. It was like the whole world was electronically dancing around them. Military personnel moved urgently, typing frantically, working the phones, yelling to each other.
Peterson was in his element, instinctively connected to these high-tech military surroundings.
Peterson followed Moore as they strutted through the war-room, down a long corridor, and past an armed guard, who snapped to attention and saluted.
They reached a door which read “Authorized Personnel Only,” and Moore placed his hand on the wall and a light scanned his palm. The door slid open, revealing a modern, white hallway which seemed to stretch forever.
As they entered, the door swooshed closed behind them.
“In God’s name, what’s happening?” Peterson finally asked.
“God has nothing to do with it.” If Peterson didn’t know General Moore better, he’d almost sound as if he were frightened. “We are doing our best to understand the situation.”
They reached the end of the hallway and another door slid open, and there, leaning with his back against the wall and rotating a pencil in his hand, stood Dr. Washington, an African American male, around thirty five years old. Maybe it was his eyeglasses, or maybe it was his dated suit, but to Peterson he had the look of a liberal, 1960’s equal rights activist. Peterson disliked him already.
Moore provided a quick introduction: “Commander Peterson, meet Doctor Jamal Washington.”
Doctor? thought Peterson. What the hell was he doing here?
Neither stepped forward to extend a hand.
Moore, wasting no time, turned and marched down a hallway, Peterson and Washington quick on his heels.
“What has the Pentagon reported?” Peterson asked.
“The infection is spreading,” Moore answered, the scratchy sound in his voice signaling fatigue.
Peterson struggled to stay respectful. “Infection? General, I saw a dead little girl get up and bite her mother’s face off. What type of infection can do this?”
“You seem shaken,” General Moore stated, sounding disappointed
In a too-calm voice, Dr. Washington spoke up: “Permission to speak very frankly General.”
“Go ahead,” Moore snapped, clearly in no mood for formalities.
“Why should we trust you, Commander Peterson, as shaken as you are?” Dr. Washington was overly self-assured.
Peterson swallowed his ego and took a deep breath. “I’m not shaken, Doctor. I’m simply trying to put the pieces together.” He was lying. Shaken was exactly what Peterson was. What was strange is that Washington wasn’t.
Washington’s eyes drilled a hole in Peterson. “What do you think is happening?”
Peterson was stumped, and didn’t know how to respond. “I’m not certain, Dr. Washington.”
“I understand how you’re feeling,” said Washington, speaking to Peterson as if he were a fifth grader, “scared, confused, as is the rest of the U.S. public. But you have to look at this with logic. There truly is no other rational explanation for this event, this phenomena, except that it is some sort of viral infection which has simply been unseen before. Therefore, we crack the biological nature of this infection, we find answers, and we find an inoculation. Situation over.”
“We have a mission,” Moore interrupted, as he stopped walking. He inched closer to Peterson. “Once you commit, there are only two ways out of this. Do you understand what I am saying?”
Peterson had been cautioned this way only once before in his career. The mission he’d accepted then was unlike any other before or since. He’d operated outside of constitutional law, beyond levels of national security classifications.
The only two ways out were success or death.
“”