Read The Dark Trilogy Online

Authors: Patrick D'Orazio

Tags: #zombie apocalypse, #(¯`'•.¸//(*_*)\\¸.•'´¯)

The Dark Trilogy (77 page)

George wondered why he still bothered. Exercise seemed rather pointless these days.
Old habits die hard.
He knew it was true enough, but that wasn’t all of it. So he went through the stomach crunches, pushups, situps, and anything else he could do in the silence of the dark and dusty rooms of the church in which he was stuck, knowing that as he tried so hard to exhaust his body, he was trying even harder to keep his mind occupied.

George surveyed the crowded back room. It was a storage closet in the place he’d called home for over a month now. Cardboard crates and cartons were stacked up against the far wall—corrugated sentinels guarding the abandoned building against the onslaught of dust bunnies and silverfish. Several boxes had been torn into and emptied of their contents. George sighed as he took a count of what remained. He was sick and tired of the sticky sweet juice boxes and stale cheese and peanut butter crackers stored for the daycare and kindergarten programs the church ran. He relished the occasional water bottle, but soon the case of Mountain Ice that they’d been rationing at one bottle a day would be gone.

For what might have been the thousandth time, he sighed and shook his head. How did it come to this? He nudged one of the half-filled boxes with his big toe and resisted the urge to kick it against the wall. This was all they had left.

George walked out into the gymnasium. The daylight shining down through the skylights was a godsend. All the doors and windows on the first floor were blocked up or covered with plywood and cafeteria tables. The light felt good, but didn’t cheer him up. Whether George was in the gym or one of the few other areas he could roam freely in the building, he felt as if he were in perpetual darkness.

George mouthed a silent prayer for the strength to get through another day as he walked across the hardwood floor. It was one of dozens of little prayers he uttered these days. He hadn’t been a devout Christian before the plague. Sure, he believed in God, but attending church was something he did on autopilot. It could salve a guilty conscience, demonstrate devotion, or set a good example for his daughters, but it had mostly been a façade, a convenient cover-up for someone who couldn’t be bothered to care anymore.

It shocked him when Helen decided to convert to his religion years ago. George was not gung ho about the idea, but she insisted. When Roxanne was born, religion all of a sudden became that much more vital to Helen, and she pressed George to become more active in the church. He sometimes felt as if his wife were steamrolling him, but he loved her too much not to cave to the pressure. He had to admit that without Helen’s religious zeal, his children might have grown up clueless about God and faith in general. She made sure they were baptized, went to Sunday school, and took communion … the whole nine yards. George sat back and watched, content in knowing that his wife had taken on that mantle of responsibility and was doing a bang-up job of it.

Now, in the aftermath of the hell the world had become, he’d been “reborn.” The pillars of the world had crumbled, and that’s when the praying started. It came in a rush; there was no gradual transformation. George comprehended the error of his ways, and that changed him irrevocably. He would recite prayers on an almost hourly basis, and they had an element of gratitude in them—he thanked God for tolerating a last-second convert. Perhaps that was why he was still alive: he’d been given the chance to repent his sins and to rectify his past mistakes.

George’s mind switched gears as he thought about the boy for a moment. They were trapped in this place together, but the preteen was so distant it felt as if he were somewhere else entirely. George had tried to get Jason to warm up to him, tried to get him to talk or even pray, but the kid cared little about God … or anything else for that matter. That was no surprise, but it was still frustrating. All they had was each other, but Jason acted as if even that were too much to deal with.

The boy had been that way ever since Jennifer had given up on him. That was when George had assumed the mantle of responsibility for Jason, but it was clear the damage caused by her decision had been profound. Those cannibal bastards roaming around outside couldn’t have ripped him apart any more thoroughly. Jason had been gutted, just not in a physical sense.

So George prayed alone.

George prayed for the boy, he prayed for both their souls, and he prayed for guidance. He prayed for strength and the ability to avoiding going insane. He also prayed for mercy and forgiveness. But mostly, he prayed for his wife and two daughters waiting for him back home.

George basked in the bright sunlight and tried to appreciate the warmth it gave off. His footsteps echoed as he walked across the gym. There was no rush to get to the door. These days, there was little need to rush anywhere.

George resisted the urge to open the closet housing the basketballs so he could take a few shots with one. Working up a sweat would be great—it might even take his mind off of everything for a bit. Unfortunately, the dead were right outside. If they heard him, his struggles over the past month would be for naught.

It was luck that had gotten him this far. All sorts of luck: bad luck that the world had gone Looney Tunes, good luck that he had made it to the church with Jason alive, and dumb luck that they had survived this long.

He would have run long ago. To hell with the walking corpses outside, he would have faced them and all the dangers they posed. They were frightening, those rotting mockeries of life, but more so, they were sad. When George looked into their eyes, they seemed lost. They no longer knew who or what they once had been. They weren’t too sharp, and he was certain he could slip past them if he was careful. The volume of abandoned vehicles on the road was staggering; he could have his pick of cars with the keys still in the ignition and enough gas to get him all the way home.

He would have done it already, had it not been for Jason.

***

There were four of them originally: Jennifer, Al, George, and Jason. They escaped the shelter together when things went bad. The high school was filled with refugees just like them, all crammed in the gym—a thousand or more at least. So many, in fact, that the soldiers had to funnel newcomers over to the elementary school across the street. At first the refugees were mainly locals—residents of Gallatin and the surrounding area who’d been urged to head to the local shelter and wait out the chaos there.

Things had been easy for the early arrivals. There was plenty of room and a belief that the troubles outside would be resolved quickly. It was when people started pouring in from all over the region that the sense of optimism faltered. They brought with them stories of the city’s doom.

The Guardsmen did a good job of getting everyone settled and even squelching rumors of how things had gone from bad to unbelievably worse in the space of just a few days. Not just in Cincinnati, but everywhere. But despite their best efforts, every new group brought with them horrific stories that spread like wildfire. Tales spread from cot to cot, group to group. There was little to do in the cramped gymnasium but gossip, and the only topic to gossip about was how bad things were out there.

George had been tossed unceremoniously into the shelter and knew no one there. With no family or neighbors with whom to powwow, he gathered what information he could by spying on the conversations of others. The city was burning; it was dying before their very eyes. The dead were coming back to life, attacking the living and transforming them into similar monstrosities.

The undead were everywhere. At first, reports were that they’d been contained. But outbreaks that started in some of the more blighted neighborhoods around the city spread rapidly. The National Guard would cordon off one area, and an outbreak would be reported elsewhere. There appeared to be no way to pinpoint a source contaminant in the city at all. Someone would be bitten and then flee to another part of town. They would die, reanimate, and start the cycle all over again.

Nothing the military did seemed to make any headway, and despite efforts to house and protect refugees, everyone stuck in the Gallatin High School was getting the sense that there was nothing anyone, including the military, could do to stop this plague from engulfing the world.

The stories that came in were hard for George to swallow at first, but the volume wore him down as it did everyone else, until it was hard to deny what was happening. There were comparisons to Auschwitz and the battlefields of Vietnam. Dump trucks filled with corpses stacked like cordwood were driven through the city’s neighborhoods as soldiers in hazmat outfits dragged dead bodies out of houses and loaded them up. Crematoriums were set up around the city to euthanize or dispose of those who had been infected. “Emergency Virus Centers,” where people could take those who were sick for treatment, were set up. But treatment had a tendency to make a person disappear. Families and even churches had taken to hiding those who had been bitten, despite the government’s rapid enactment of laws calling for the execution of those offering safe harbor for the infected. Promises of a cure, or of genuine treatments, saturated the airwaves at first, then tapered off as everyone stopped believing them.

Newer refugees arriving at the high school made it clear that shelters and the small areas surrounding their locations were the only places over which the government retained control. Everywhere else, rioters and looters made it impossible for the military to differentiate between the undead and those who were just angry and desperate. There were still pockets of resistance against the inexorable march of the dead—citizen militias banding together and barricading themselves in apartment complexes, office buildings, and other makeshift fortresses. Others chose to lock their front doors and turn off their lights with the hope that death would pass them by. But even the most optimistic newcomers to the shelter admitted that most of those people had fared even worse than the National Guard troops committed to defending them.

The shelters were supposed to be beacons of hope. That’s what the soldiers with the bullhorns said as they drove up and down the streets. It was what the government claimed on television and radio. They were places citizens should go to ensure their safety. George did not want to be here, separated from his family, but he did believe he was safe there, at first. Until he saw how some seeking sanctuary were treated. Those who had been bitten were forcefully separated from family members who naively believed all were welcome. Those who were docile or already in a state of shock would accept this, believing that the best possible treatments were being made available to those who had been bitten and that they would be reunited with their family members once they had been vaccinated—or whatever it was the government doctors were doing to them. Others weren’t so understanding. In those cases, things tended to get ugly fast. Fights would erupt in the hall where newcomers were processed and inspected for wounds and infections. Family members would scream and attack soldiers tasked with the responsibility of loading the infected onto the trucks to be sent away … to where, no one was ever told.

It was clear that most of the soldiers were losing the battle to stay impartial and focused on their duties. George knew that as National Guard troops, most of them were locals. They had grown up in the area and knew a lot of the people they were sending off for ‘treatment.’ He could not imagine how hard these assigned duties were on them.

The shelter became something akin to a small city; people were jammed in shoulder to shoulder, attempting to live whatever lives they could under such horrid circumstances. George witnessed transactions for drugs and sex, theft, and acts far more foul. He felt helpless, as though all hope for the human race were lost.

That was when George began to pray.

It wasn’t hard to surmise that it was like this the entire world over. The virus had first hit overseas, in several different areas of the globe, seemingly overnight. No one could figure out where it had started. It then hit North America with cases reported in Toronto, Canada and Monterrey, Mexico. Before the borders could be sealed, there were cases reported in Baltimore and Denver. The National Guard moved in quickly, imposing rules and taking over from the civil authorities. The Army was next: men and women returning from war zones in Iraq and Afghanistan, and from U.S. military bases all over the world. The president recalled all troops to the homeland in one fell swoop. But by then, the country was already in the grasping fist of the plague. Martial law or its equivalent had been enacted in every corner of the globe, but there was nothing but complete and utter anarchy to show for it.

Those days in the shelter were not the fondest of memories, but as George remained stuck inside the church in which he and Jason were hiding out, his mind kept reliving everything that had led up to his arrival there.

The saddest part of it all was that it could have been avoided. He had been staying at a local hotel and knew he should have left the moment he realized that the plague that had been sweeping the globe had arrived in his little corner of Ohio. Even later, when the hotel manager had come knocking at his door, telling him he had five minutes to pack his belongings and get out in front of the hotel where a squad of National Guard soldiers were waiting, he should have run.

Wildwood, where George lived, was less than an hour away. Even the traffic clogging the highways wouldn’t have been an issue. He knew plenty of back roads. Sure, it would have been dangerous, but he would have been with his family now, rather than stuck here in this dusty old church.

***

George opened the door to the stairwell, being careful not to let it slam behind him. He began the short climb that would take him to the second floor.

***

George remembered when Jennifer and Al came to the shelter. Befriending the newlyweds had been the only good thing that had happened to him since he had gotten there. They had moved to Ohio only weeks before and knew no one in the city except for a few new coworkers of Al’s.

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