Contaminated: A Zombie Survival Novel (16 page)

“Okay, boss, I think some of those nasties are walking around setting off flame throwers or something, they made some upgrades to the system without telling you. It looks like a bunch of walking Roman candles in there.”

Frank froze. What was he supposed to do? Look after Selena? Figure out a way to battle flamethrowers, and nasties on fire? At the moment, he just wanted a drink and something for the burns on his back and legs.

Selena pushed herself against the wall, tears streamed down her face and Frank watched as she reached up to remove her mask.

“No, don’t take it off,” he yelled in a voice not his own. There was worry and concern laced with something he couldn’t identify. He wrote it off as an adrenaline induced comment.

Selena reacted as if she’d been slapped, but lowered her hand just the same.

“I’m sorry I yelled, it’s just we think one of the ways to get infected is by breathing the air.” Frank leaned against the door in case any more blasts came their way, not to stop them, just lessen them perhaps.

“That’s a good theory, and to be honest I thought so too. I wasn’t thinking when I went to remove it, sorry, it won’t happen again. Though, if you’re right we have a problem. There’s no way to get out of here without exposing the rest of the world.” A note of resignation hung in her voice.

“It’s a bit late for that, sweetheart, we cracked open the doors into this place on Level 1 and didn’t shut them. Air has been getting out for almost an hour now,” Carson said.

Frank let his head fall back and it hit the solid metal behind him. A bit of warmth came through, but not the searing heat they’d felt when the door was open. He thought about what Carson said and realized he was right. Even if they managed to find a way out of here, what the hell kind of welcome would they receive?

Selena’s hiss of pain reminded him of her wounds and he grabbed his pack. A second later, he was at her side, tending to the blisters and burns with the utmost of care. He put some ointment on them and wrapped the worst.

When he finished she smiled at him and he couldn’t help but return it. Damn it, this was not the time. He went his whole life without giving a damn about anyone, but himself. Then he finds a woman with allergies in a pile of debris that his stomach decided to do flip-flops over that is about as useful as a glass of water to a drowning man. He ignored the fact he didn’t know if she could be trusted because she was likely a double agent.

“Well, they certainly changed something since I approved the blueprints for this level. It looks like they must be set to fire in bursts to save on fuel when they sense motion,” Frank said with a heavy sigh.

“What the hell is it with you and motion sensors, damn,” Carson whined.

“I didn’t want sensors on this floor, just something simple to destroy the data. What they put in there is overkill and I have no idea why,” Frank replied.

Carson laughed, “You don’t know why? Are you really our leader and yet that stupid? Do you have any idea what kind of crap they have going on in here? That data would be worth millions and put Hooks in prison for his next fifty lifetimes. You bet your ass he made sure they incinerated this floor.”

Frank didn’t say or do anything as Carson’s comment sunk in. The idiot was right again. Frank hated that, but at the moment, Hooks was at the top of his hit list. When, not if, he got out of here, he would pay a special visit to that creep.

“We can’t wait here, there has to be something we can do,” Lightfoot said.

“Yeah, you can go in the room and find out if you’re fireproof. Let us know how that works out,” Carson taunted.

“Enough, I don’t have the time, energy, or patience to deal with your crap. We’ll give it a couple more minutes and check in again.” Frank went back to his spot against the door as he glanced at his watch. Every minute felt like an eternity.

“I only took this job for the cash. I wanted to save up and go back to school,” Selena said wistfully.

Frank tilted his head and smiled. “You’ll go to school, don’t worry. I’ve been in worse situations than this.”  He smiled as he lied to her. “What are you going to study?” he asked, trying to keep her hopes up.

“Out of curiosity, what situations have you even been in worse than a skinny ass silo, with no way to go but down, booby traps on every damn level, and the friggin undead coming at you?” Carson asked casually.

“Shut up, Selena was about to answer a question, you pig.” Frank smiled again, something he found himself doing a lot the last few minutes. Either he was going to die soon or he’d been infected.

With a coy grin, Selena answered, “Medicine, I have my nursing license, but I want to be a doctor. My employer got an offer to come here and continue his research and asked me to come with him. Now I wish…well it doesn’t matter, does it?” The smile she forced onto her face told Frank more than words could, she’d given up.

Time’s up, he thought, as he saw the numbers on his watch tick by. “It does matter,” he said as he stood to check the door. Out of the corner of his eye, he saw Lightfoot with a knowing grin on his face.

“Lightfoot, wipe that smile off your face.”

“Yes, sir.” He even saluted, which both Selena and Frank chuckled at.

The door opened and the change in temperature was noticeable. No more nasties running around which was good, and when he focused, he could hear a clicking sound, but nothing happened.

Their fuel tanks must be empty,
Frank thought.

“I’m pretty sure it’s safe, but I’m going to make sure first. If you hear me scream…”

“We’ll make sure to shut the door and leave you in there,” Lightfoot cut him off.

“No, come and see what the hell is wrong and save me.” Frank winked at Selena as he entered the room, his newly loaded FNP at the ready.

The floor was littered with ash and charred bits of things, he’d rather assume were once office chairs or desks. The walls were completely destroyed, then again that’s how security was designed. As soon as the alarm went off, tiny signals were sent to micro-bombs in the wall. There were no roof, so this left anything within the office exposed to the flames, including the scientists. Frank wondered if Selena’s boss was in here, he hoped not.

He cursed himself again. Attachment caused you to think in terms he couldn’t afford in his line of work. Then again, if things happened the way he suspected they would, nothing would matter in a couple of hours.

Something hit him from behind and he spun to see one of the nasties coming at him. Bright white teeth against a blackened face. All the clothes and skin were gone from its body, only a few well-done organs hung within a well-done ribcage.

A bony hand reached out as it fell to the floor. Frank kicked its head across the room and willed his heart to stop pounding. In the center of the room, the air thickened with soot and ash. Frank was thankful for the mask, but irritated at how much it cut down on his visibility.

He heard a click and jumped in the opposite direction to huddle behind the frame of a filing cabinet. When nothing happened, he gathered the one nerve he had left and stood once more. Not a sheet of paper or usable computer was in sight. The outlines of what were once people, or possibly something else covered the ground. He no longer felt the need to count after thirty.

These men and women were scientists. They’d been brought here by him, or someone just like him, with promises of saving the future, curing cancer, rainbows or ponies. As he looked down, he thought of Dr. Covington, and wondered what became of him.

***

Arthur sprinted up the stairs when Smith screamed. By the time he arrived, she’d emptied her M4, but it still clicked as she held down the trigger. He grabbed her, the gun, and then looked into the room ahead.

He shut the door and leaned against it. “Those aren’t offices.” Arthur fumbled to reload the rifle.

“What the hell was that? Please tell me it wasn’t what I think it was,” Smith pled.

Arthur didn’t respond. He took a mental inventory of what was in his bags. Not thinking about the other room seemed like the best course of action for right now.

“Answer me, dammit! I came here with my husband, because I was told I’d get to work with you. I’m one of the few people in the scientific community who believe in your work, but if this is the kind of crap you’re mixed up in, I overestimated you,” Smith yelled.

Arthur wanted her to be quiet. “Look, I was approached by them to study rocks, for God’s sake. I had no idea about anything else they were doing. Hell, I just arrived here about five hours ago, I haven’t even unpacked. I need you to stay focused.” Arthur handed her the M4, reloaded, and set it to burst.

“As for what that is beyond this door, off the cuff I’d say that it is experiments gone wrong,” Arthur said.

Smith nodded. “Gone very wrong, I’d say. Benson went through here. Do you think he knew or just ignored it all?”

Arthur knew that no matter how much someone tried to blind themselves to the atrocities; there was no way to do it successfully – unless you knew about it.

“I think he knew about it, but we need to keep moving. Keep your eyes open, this floor will definitely have some sort of badass security protocol in place. You know something like this would destroy Sunset if it got out to the media.” Arthur checked Dixon’s Sig, and pulled the door open.

“Right, as opposed to developing something that’s transmitted by air, kills, and then reanimates you,” Smith mumbled.

Arthur agreed with the validity of her point, but didn’t say anything. The focus for now had to be survival.

The floor was lined with eight rows, extending the width of the corridor for about eighty feet. The rows were comprised of large capsules of a sort, more like hanging bags with clear solution inside of them. A person or what at one time was a person, was in the center of each capsule in some sort of stasis.

Arthur noticed with irritation that the lights flickered, as usual. He paid more attention to them this time, because he dared not look at what surrounded him. The on and off pattern of the bulbs seemed purposeful, almost as if it was being done on purpose.

“Smith, you know Morse code?” he asked.

“No, why?”

“Just curious, keep moving, we need to get out of here before--”

The words were out of Arthur’s mouth a second before a snap echoed throughout the room and one of the hanging coffins hit the ground with a splat. Then another, and another... Arthur realized someone was toying with them.

The hooks holding the containers in place were being released around them. Within seconds, over a dozen bodies surrounded them on the floor. He wondered why they would do this. They were mutated dead things, not a threat.

Then one of them moved with a small twitch at first, a spasm, and then full body animation. When the shock wore off, Arthur took in the sight of dozens of bodies made grotesque by experiments, with removed limbs, organs, eyes, patches of skin, and they had attached other things in place of them. What made the scene truly horrific was the fact they were getting to their feet, or using their hands as they ambled toward him.

Smith started to panic again and Arthur yelled at her, “If you empty that gun, we’re both going to die. I get that you’re scared.”  He stopped talking to take careful aim and take down a man with two feet stitched to his elbows, and another with some sort of lizard-like skin grafted onto his chest. “I am too, but you need to calm down.”

“Right, dead things persevered for reasons unknown, but we can assume they weren’t good ones, are coming after us. I’ll just take a seat, because this is something people see all the damn time,” Smith hissed.

Arthur took out two more, unsure what to call them. They weren’t like the things they referred to as contaminated, because they were dead first and then reanimated. This brought into question how they were infected, since they didn’t breathe.

Smith fired off several rounds and managed to take down a few more. Arthur finished them off, grabbed a new magazine to slip into his Sig, and watched with relief as Smith did the same. He moved forward, pushing her along. He noticed her reading the plastic labels on some of the intact pouches.

“This doesn’t make any sense,” she said.

Arthur stared at her with an incredulous expression. “
This
doesn’t make any sense to you?”

“Okay, nothing makes sense, but what I mean is the labels don’t make any sense. They’re years old in some cases. Seem to be bodies donated to science, but what’s been done to them is nightmarish at best, and serves no scientific purpose.” Smith stared at one body in particular as she spoke.

Arthur noted it was male on top, but goat legs had replaced the bottom portion. He thought of the mythical creature Pan. Aside from an attempt to bring back ancient mythology, he saw no reason for any of this.

“I remember reading an article in a journal about meshing humans with other species to see which ones blended together the best. Sounded like it was far from actual human trials,” Arthur said, “what I don’t get is why they came back. They’re dead, so how the hell did they inhale anything?”

Smith looked at him with a horrified expression. She ran to one of the back walls and read dials and knobs that meant nothing to him. As she did, his heart almost stopped when he realized whatever the security measure was on this floor, it hadn’t kicked in, unless it was dropping giant water balloons on them, which he doubted.

“They weren’t dead; they were in a state of suspended animation. According to the notes on the files, they were put into this condition seconds prior to death. They’ve been feeding them a solution mixed with oxygen from here.” Smith turned with unfocused eyes.

“Okay, that’s horrible, but it certainly explains how they came back so quickly, and supports the airborne contaminant theory, so now let’s get out of here.” He grabbed Smith and dragged her a few feet before she yanked her arm away.

“I can’t leave them like this, it’s inhumane.” Smith fired her weapon at the rows of hanging bodies.

“Are you insane? Do you want to die?” Arthur yelled.

“I have no intention of dying, but if it were you in one of these bags, would you want to be left like this?” Smith started firing, not waiting for a response.

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