Black Parade (11 page)

Read Black Parade Online

Authors: Jacqueline Druga

BOOK: Black Parade
9.91Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

In one of the very last ground battles, just outside the Texas Oklahoma border, the small isolated medical camp they visited was hit by a large pocket of enemy gorillas.

In a sneak attack they mortared the camp, then went in and took out the rest. It was in the middle of the night when there was minimal security. Why would there be a lot of security? After all, in every instance of the battles, never had a field hospital been hit.

We cared for enemy ill and injured too.

It was always speculated that someone knew the great mind of Dean Hayes was there.

It took three days for us to learn of this. Three days of radio silence from them, and we went down.

Dean was the only survivor .. barely. He lived for a few days and that was it.

Frank was never the same after his best friend and wife died.

Never the same.

The toll of the deaths of his brother and then his wife hit him hard. At least he still had his children.

The Slagels, the mighty family spared of the plague, went down in the Great War and after.

But even with the heartache and the loss, and Great War gave Frank another leadership position.

He was named President of the United States in 2028. That was after the death of his brother and granddaughter and retirement of his father.

But it wasn’t long after that Joe too left us. It was the greatest loss of all.

But it wasn't before Jack.

Jack Slagel is very important.

While his daughter was ill, Johnny met an immigrant nurse named Natasha. They married and on Oct 28
th
, 2029, Natasha bore a son. However, like Johnny’s grandmother, Natasha died giving birth.

I still remember when Jack was born.

Johnny was proud of his son, yet drowning in grief over the loss of his wife.

He asked me to be his godfather, an honor I proudly accepted.

“Look at him, Danny. He is so strong,” Johnny said.

“He is.”

“He looks like a Slagel. This is the next generation.”

“Of course Johnny,” I chuckled. I mean wasn’t that obvious?

“No, Danny, in a world that has fallen. In a world that needs to be lifted up… he was born to be a hero.”

I remember the look on Johnny’s face when he held his newborn son, lifted him, looked at him and told him. “You were born for greatness, Jack. You were born with a great purpose. I know it. I feel it. One day, so will you.”

Jack Joseph Slagel was anointed with an honor he was too young to understand. A legacy was bestowed upon an infant.

Johnny sensed something that day.

Jack was the last baby born of that decade. The last baby born before everything

 

Moving to Extinction

17.
Living Beyond

When the very first plague hit, surviving women were outnumbered by surviving men. Often times hundreds to one. But after the Great War and the arrival of the enemy, many immigrants and refugees were women.

Women weren’t as rare.

Especially the young ones.

To someone like me, it wasn’t an option.

Frank Slagel passed the reproduction law. Now, I know that sounds pretty lame, and those who knew Frank in his ‘early’ years, when he wasn’t always the brightest bulb, they may have thought it was a joke. But it wasn’t. It was needed.

As boring as they may be, let me give you the stats.

In the ten years after the plague and before the Great War, four hundred and twenty-six babies were born. The biggest percentage was around the seven-year mark.

In the four years following the plague… six. Six babies were born, nearly a hundred thousand people and only six babies. Fifteen percent of the population were women in their prime birthing years.

Two years following we had an increase, but it never hit fifty.

In the beginning of 2028, when Frank became president, he issued the official Reproduction Proclamation Law.

In a sense, but in a more humane way, Frank was following the George law. If we wanted to continue as a species, we had to reproduce.

Therefore, any woman living in the United States between the ages of 19 and 40, unless medically excused had exactly two years to conceive, or they would be artificially inseminated by a donor of their choice or a volunteer.

They would be placed in pregnancy detention centers to ensure conception.

Sounds harsh, I know but we were dwindling.

He came to me with it first and we laid out the plan. Actually, he came to me before becoming president. We made sure we had the cows, and the processing centers for food and milk for these women. Special farms and greenhouses were set up for the ‘expectant’.

Also, special medical care.

These women and their offspring would get the best of the best.

We found out after the law went into effect that it wasn’t that these women didn’t want to have children, they couldn’t find suitable partners.

Wow. The return of conventional relationships.

It was amazing. I never thought I'd see the day where one on one relationships would return. When women were outnumbered, women married more than one man.

At least most did.

I remember Joe, right before he passed away, talking to Frank about the law.

“You are acting like George two,” he said to Frank. “Next thing you know you’ll put these women in vats and farm the kids.”

“If need be,” Frank said.

“You’re an ass.”

“And man is a dying breed.”

Goddamn if it didn’t work.

End of 2028. Five hundred births.

By the fall of 2029… 8,000 babies were born.

Jack was the last baby born that year.

In January 2030, over four hundred women were registered as ‘due’.

Four hundred and seventeen gave birth.

Four hundred and twelve died right after.

Like Natasha.

The other five went comatose eventually passing with in the year.

Something went wrong. And without someone like Dean, we were lost as to the reasons for it.

February rolled around and nearly the same numbers were expected to be born.

When the first few women died giving birth, we immediately moved to C-sections.

It didn’t work.

Some sort of fetal maternal blood transfusion was taking place, some sort of virus, that upon the detachment of the placenta, the mother instantly bled to death and went into cardiac failure.

All attempts to save them were futile.

We had to cease and desist reproduction.

Stop getting pregnant.

In fact, because we wouldn’t figure out the virus or the cause, we issued a statement that any woman expecting could, if they chose... abort their child.

Many did.

By June, we figured out that by taking the child early before 30 weeks gestation saved the mother.

So whatever was happening occurred in the final trimester.

Most of the babies survived the premature birth. But the women never got pregnant again.

No one got pregnant again.

Of course, there were accidents. And the frightened mothers would come to us.

2033
- two births.

2034
- not a single baby was born.

That’s not to say none were conceived. They were. Not conventionally.

Back tracking….

 

See when man is face with extinction, when the youngest person in the word is not seconds or days old, but rather years old, and the majority of the population was over forty, you start to think. You start to get desperate.

We examined every birth. Every pregnancy. And we found four mothers that gave birth, never got sick and the children were healthy.

Why? What was the difference?

Five men, old men, that were scientists before the plague hit, were working on the conception problem.

These four women were artificially inseminated.

So were others, but they died. So what was the difference? They had all been impregnated with embryos that were frozen years earlier.

Obviously the virus or whatever it was, affected the fertile males somewhere around January 2029. Because every baby naturally conceived after that point, their mothers died.

We were able to round up a few test women and impregnated them.

They delivered and were fine.

But here was the clincher. The women, the ones that aborted or that lived through premature births never menstruated again. They lost the ability to reproduce.

So our numbers kept dwindling.

But the embryos didn’t.

Thousands upon thousands of frozen embryos were discovered. They had been stored by George and the Society when they were trying to repopulate the world.

Why let them go to waste, right?

You must understand. Although we had seen war, we had ten years to recover. No, wait. Fourteen years to recover. We were back on the technological track. We were in the clean up phase. There were cities that had been abandoned and destroyed, standing as monuments to the Great War, but we were on the road to recovery. Civilization was being rebuilt and we were living free. Frank ran a great country.

We were focused, you see, on man not becoming extinct.

That’s why we made the decision. We got the word out.

The decision was to use those embryos.

People were excited. I mean, they had believed that another child would never be born. Then, low and behold, a miracle occurred.

Yes! We will multiply.

Coolers and freezer were located underground. They were protected with solar generators as a safeguard. Life vaults we called them. Thousands upon thousands of embryos had been discovered. Thousands upon thousands of women signed up for the inseminations.

We recruited every medical professional we could find. It was like an implantation factory.

A ninety percent attachment rate. No spontaneous abortions, miscarriages. We were on our way. Solution to the infertility virus had been found.

We did it.

We would carry on.

We should have known better.

 

18.
Births

Destiny and life both get in the way. No matter how hard you try at some things it’s almost as if you push and you push, but it’s meant to be one way. No matter how hard you try to achieve that goal, you’re not gonna reach it. Let me explain.

I once saw a movie where a group of people defeated death and in doing so, death wanted to defeat them. Death chased them until one by one death got its way. I never believed it was death, I believed it was God. God’s will. Once in awhile, God gets in a pissy mood and he wants to have his own way. He wanted those eight people in the movie dead, they didn’t die, so he made sure his original plan achieved.

Man, as I had said before, is only meant to live a certain amount of time on this planet before facing extinction.

I truly believe that was God’s will. But mankind, a strong and determined species, fought against extinction. God then threw everything He had at us, to keep us back.

That's just my theory.

 

I never talked about Marcus … Yes, I know I digress. But allow me to touch upon him.

Prior to my arrival in Beginnings, Marcus was born. Under Beginnings, as you recall were the cryogenically frozen scientists, resting within the tunnel labs. Also in the labs was a case which contained two hundred and fifty frozen embryos. Some of them were marked, some of them were not. Most of them were just numbered.

One of them was marked ‘LEP’. Dean couldn’t figure out what any of them were. There was only one way to find out. Have someone give birth. He asked for volunteers. Melissa stepped forward. She was implanted with Marcus, and the embryo grew at an astronomical rate. His rate of gestation was six times faster than the normal rate. And he grew six times as fast.

LEP is a Laboratory Enhanced Predator. Predator.

That should tell you a lot.

Though along the same lines as the killer babies, Marcus was an earlier version of the embryo because Marcus was easily domesticated.

He never learned how to form more than one syllable, easily speakable words. He lived an normal life until about human age six, when Marcus … just died.

I’ll explain that later.

There was always something special about Marcus, and we assumed the LEP’s or killer babies, in the sector 32 region, were of the same breed.

That’s my digression. It is important. We move on.

 

On the eve of my fifty second birthday, I sat elated and happy in the waiting room of one of our birthing hospitals on the east coast.

Frank as with me. Mainly because that particular hospital was expecting the most January arrivals.

Other books

Defenseless by Adrianne Byrd
The Theory of Attraction by Delphine Dryden
The Scorpion Rules by Erin Bow
Googleplex by James Renner
Kiss of Broken Glass by Madeleine Kuderick
House of Fallen Trees by Gina Ranalli