The Dead Walk The Earth (Book 3) (39 page)

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Authors: Luke Duffy

Tags: #Zombie Apocalypse

BOOK: The Dead Walk The Earth (Book 3)
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'Mind the children,' instructed Craig, his magnum booming out in the confines of the classroom. The 44 shell took the back of the head off an elderly woman, dressed in tweed jacket and skirt. Before the corpse dropped, Bull pulled out a baseball bat from a strap hanging from his belt and hit a young man dressed in football gear directly on the top of his head with such force that it just caved in like a ripe melon.  Grey brain matter squeezed out of both sides with jagged shards of skull.

Tom managed to get clean single shots with his MP5 and took out three WDs standing slightly to the left.

Bull hit two more home runs in a space of three seconds, which left one for Pump, who dropped to one knee to allow him to take an elevated shot because of the children behind the WD. The single shot from the pump action weapon hit the elderly man’s throat, severing it, apart from a few strands of sinew. It left his head dangling as the WD wobbled once and crashed forward onto the barricade.

All the while, the screaming of the children had reached hysterical pitch and the poor besieged teacher was so traumatised that he continued swinging wildly with the bat, even as Anderson screamed at him that it was all over.

The panting teacher suddenly stopped, looking at the four men as if awakening from a nightmare, then stared wide-eyed at the nine corpses on the floor and spread over the barricade.

'Quickly, children, out, out,' he screamed, pulling open the barricade.

The traumatised group ran through, encouraged by Bull, Pump and Tom, who ushered them outside to be gathered up by members of other squads who were arriving outside in the schoolyard.  Anderson was left alone with the teacher as the room emptied. 'You did a great job,' he smiled offering his hand.

The man looked him directly in the eye, his expression pained as he shook his head, 'Not...not so great,' he smiled weakly.

Anderson tilted his head to one side and frowned.

The teacher slowly pulled up his sleeve.

Anderson looked at the deep bite mark on his wrist and arm, dark crimson blood oozing from the wound. Anderson realised the wrist wound would have sent the virus coursing through his body via the ulna and radial arteries along with a number of major veins quickly.

He stepped back and raised his Magnum, 'I'm so sorry.'

'Not as sorry as me,' shrugged the man, fighting the early transition symptoms as his lips curled back in a half snarl, his head twitching as the virus began to take control.

'You have a message for anyone?' asked Anderson softly, his heart sinking.

The man started to sway, building up for the Zombie Mambo, his face contorting as he struggled to speak. 'Tell...tell my wife, I...I…' The man let out a low moan and began to shuffle forward, lost to the virus.

Craig placed one shot between the teacher’s eyes, turned, and walked out.

Outside, the group guessed what had happened.

'You, um...you okay, Craig?' asked Tom softly.

Anderson stopped in his tracks halfway towards the waiting four-wheel drive and spun around, 'Okay...Okay!' he yelled. 'Yeah, I'm good, having a great day. I just had to kill a man who gave his life to save the children in his care.' His voice was getting higher, drawing the attention of the gathered squads. 'Just before I popped him he asked me to...’ Anderson stopped suddenly and took a deep breath, 'Sorry, Tom.'

'Forget it,' shrugged his lifelong friend, 'you always were an asshole.'

Anderson smiled and wagged a warning finger at his friend, 'Don't overdo the friendship card.'

'Whatever,’ grinned Tom climbing into the Discovery. 'Where are we going?'

Anderson sighed deeply, rubbing a huge hand over his tired features, 'I need to deliver a personal message.’

 

Six hours later, Anderson was sitting with the general council leader in his office set up in the Barbican.

'How are things in sector 14, Craig,' asked Steve Knight, the elected president of Fort London Council of the People.

'Screenings all done, WDs all accounted for.'

'Any newly infected?’

Hanson’s heart lurched for a second at the memory of the teacher and the meeting with his wife, where he had to second-guess the message he wanted to pass on to her. ‘He said to tell you that he loved you,’ he had told her. ‘Said to tell you to remember him as he was,’ he lied.

‘We lost twenty five people,' continued Anderson. ‘Á hundred are being held in the holding area, but I think they’re clean. We´ll know when each reaches the thirteenth hour.´

'Clean up?'

'Done.' It was always just referred to as the clean up. Chucking the bodies over the walls to the tainted might seem thoughtless, even disgusting, but it was the most hygienic way to keep the fort clean. There was not enough ground to spare for burials and the WDs were constantly at the walls anyway, so it made sense to use them to the advantage of the fort. Bodies would be picked clean in minutes, disease kept from the populaces.

'We… um...we have a new problem, Craig.'

'Guessed the day was not going to get any better,' sighed the tired ex-SAS captain.

'The trucks came in from Fort Warwick an hour ago. They...they brought a message from Bruger.’

Even the mention of Fort Warwick and Bruger made Anderson’s heart rate rise. Karl Bruger was the self-imposed leader of the massive fort, an ex-drug baron who had seized control when the opportunity arose, imposing his will over nearly two million souls with a mixture of reward and fear. 'What’s the message?'

Knight slipped a single page of typed text across his desk towards Anderson.

'Just tell me, Steve,' responded Anderson coldly not wanting to touch anything Bruger had.

Knight rose and stood with his back to his chief security officer to look out of the plate glass window onto the small garden where he often went and sat. The ten feet square area was his sanctuary where he would often escape with a cup of treasured coffee. Closing his eyes, he could make believe that the world was as it used to be and that the plague had never come, and when he opened his eyes, it will have all been a bad dream. It never worked. He had tried it many times. 'Price for the food supplies has changed.'

'Tell him to go fuck himself,' spat Anderson.

Knight snorted as he turned, 'Oh I would love to do that, Craig, believe me. Nothing would give me more pleasure but...'

'I know, Steve, I know. We need the food,' sighed Anderson in resignation.

Steve nodded. The long spoon of acceptance of having to sup with the Devil was not sitting well in his hand.

'What does he wants now?' Anderson had to fill many shopping lists on countless scavenging trips for Bruger. Items ranging from TVs to computers, exercise bikes, alcohol and countless other whims of the maniac, apart from the mainstay of their trade, the low quality fuel that Fort London produced at its crude refinery.

Knight swallowed deeply, ‘He...he wants 50 women from our fort. Pure women for...’ 

Knight didn't get to finish as Anderson exploded to his feet. ‘He wants us to pimp for him. No, Steve not a chance. Not gonna happen.'

Knight sat onto the edge of his desk as Anderson paced back and forth, the President not being prepared to speak until the man had calmed down. At six feet five and two hundred and sixty pounds of which less than seven percent was fat, the ex-SAS man was an intimidating figure. Add to that a set of fighting skills normally spread amongst six men that Knight had seen at close quarters and anyone would understand his hesitance. Eventually, his security chief stopped pacing and turned eyes onto Knight that were so filled with hate Knight actually caught his breath. 'We...we need the food, Craig,' he reminded quietly.

Anderson leaned down, his face inches from Knight, 'No, Steve,' he hissed his voice razor edged, ‘we need to kill him.'

 

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