Miller could see the flames in one of the wings to her left, outside one of the windows. It wasn’t a big fire—not yet—but it was already out of control and would be a problem soon. She’d heard no weapons discharge, so perhaps someone had set the blaze on purpose. Maybe Scratch to create a distraction? For a second, Miller panicked. What if Scratch had gone back to the hospital room looking for her and was now trapped downstairs? No, don’t change course. She’d made her decision and she’d stick to it. Scratch knew her well. He’d realize she’d somehow find a way to get outside. She’d be looking for him, not waiting in a hospital bed.
“Shit.”
She turned in a circle, sniffing. The smell of smoke was still strong, but now Miller caught a whiff something else hiding underneath that already volatile, caustic reek. A foul scent that made her freeze in her tracks.
The stench of decomp.
If zombies were on the loose that could mean a real problem for Scratch. Though Miller was accelerated, she had nothing to destroy them with other than her bare hands. She had confidence in her talents, but she wasn’t some superhero from the movies. This would get messy really fast. The clock was ticking.
Miller ran down the hall and turned and ran again. When she went past the elusive snack shop she’d never managed to locate before, she realized that she was suddenly and completely lost. Smoke and water were pouring down. She had to stick to her guns. She had no choice but to keep moving forward. Hesitation killed in an emergency. Miller went forward. She kept one eye out for the guards and the zombies, and the other out for Scratch.
She got her bearings and figured out how to move back toward a more familiar part of the facility. The air was thick and reeked of destruction. Miller found herself standing in front of the double doors that led to the exam rooms and custodial ward. She couldn’t take a chance that Scratch wasn’t in there. He might have been captured and imprisoned like the others. She shouldered her way past the door, and stopped.
Uhh-huunnnhh!
Well, at least now she knew where the zombies were.
There were twenty or thirty of them. Her accelerated mind snapped quick mental photographs. She saw a woman in a nursing gown, probably an escaped prisoner or patient, some soldiers in National Guard uniforms, a few civilians, an old couple with walkers, a traffic cop. Miller wondered where they’d all come from. There always seemed to be so damned many of them. She only pondered that eternal question for a heartbeat. She closed the gap, approaching the small horde. Miller checked the face of the nearest one. It wasn’t Scratch. She kicked the creature in the chest and moved on. It sailed backwards into two of the others, and they all tumbled to the floor, biting and snapping. Miller didn’t have time to worry about stopping to destroy their brains. She had to keep moving.
Another one came at her from the right, a thin man in a hospital gown with bare arms outstretched. Miller only paused long enough to make sure it wasn’t Scratch. She grabbed it by the wrist. It was still a fresh one, so the arm didn’t come off at the shoulder. Grunting, Miller spun in a circle; she swung it around like a child and let it crash into its triad-mates. They all went down together, thrashing comically. Miller gagged. After so long a time away from their stench, the smell was making her stomach flop over.
This wouldn’t do. She couldn’t check every single one to see if it was Scratch. Not if she was to get anywhere.
Miller picked up a utility cart. She shook the instruments and do-dads off. She then used it as a club, smashing zombie brains in as she went along. She wasn’t angry anymore, or even trying very hard. Her mind was on her man. She only cared about making good time. Her goal was the custodial ward, perhaps thirty feet away—the place where she’d first seen the prisoners. She had to believe Scratch was there. It was her last hope.
And as she reached the door to that custodial ward Miller found him. Scratch. His long hair was dangling down in front of his face. Miller’s heart leapt. She ran closer.
Part of his neck was missing.
He was dead.
Miller stopped short. She couldn’t believe it. After all this time, Scratch had finally gotten himself killed by a zombie. He’d become one of them. It didn’t seem possible. It was so damned unfair. She sobbed with grief.
Uhhhh-uhnnhhnn.
But no, something wasn’t right. It was only that this man was the right size and shape and coloring. This zombie didn’t have Scratch’s tattoos or upper body.
And Scratch had just cut his hair.
Relief washed over Miller. Then the anger came back. She swung the cart at the thing-that-wasn’t-Scratch. The upper half of the zombie flew apart, splattering her with gore. Miller didn’t care. Scratch was still alive somewhere, and that’s all that mattered. She called out.
“Hello?”
Miller pushed her way into the custodial ward. She peeked into the windows. The first few rooms were empty, but the next two were occupied.
One was Alex.
She couldn’t just leave him behind. For some reason, Miller felt obligated to help the man. He’d looked like someone who could handle himself, assuming they hadn’t fucked up his head with all those drugs. She opened the door with her key and entered.
“No!” Alex screeched.
Miller unbuckled his restraints.
“You’re… not one of those things?”
“Not yet. Let’s go.”
Alex at up and rubbed his wrists. “Ma’am, how are we going to get past the zombies?”
“Carefully and quickly,” Miller said, dryly. “Here is the deal. You follow, I lead. Stick to me like a snail on a mirror. Do what I do. If you get a weapon and a chance to shoot one, aim for the brain. Do not get bit. Now follow me.”
They went out into the corridor. Most of the zombies were still at the far end of the ward, back near the entrance. They must have been newly minted because they were wandering around in a circle, not yet in triads, clearly lost without a living target. Miller knew the story by now. After a time, one zombie would emerge as a leader. It would somehow select and communicate with two others to form a triad. Then they’d work together. She wasn’t going to wait around for that to happen here.
“This way,” Miller said. She headed in the opposite direction, away from the zombie horde.
“Wait!”
Miller turned back impatiently. “What?”
“We can’t leave Leslie?”
“Who the fuck is Leslie?”
“The girl that is locked up in the next room. We were brought here together.”
“We don’t have time for this shit.” Alex looked distraught. The zombies were only a few yards away, shuffling along and grunting. The girl would be breakfast for sure. Miller sighed. Despite herself, she went to the next room and peeked in.
A woman about Miller’s age was there. She was weeping openly in her bed, restrained like Alex had been. Miller’s heart went out to her.
Miller opened the door. “Alex, you get her out of there. I’ll keep watch.”
Alex went into the room. Miller kept a close eye on the zombies. They were slow to enter the last corridor, but they had heard the living voices and were definitely heading their way. Miller steeled herself for another hand-to-hand battle. Behind her, Alex fumbled to set his friend free. He was having trouble with the restraints. The zombies were closing the gap rapidly, grunting and moaning obscenely. The girl began to weep. “Please, get me out of here!”
“I can’t undo this, Leslie,” Alex said. “They put a lock on yours.”
“Alex,” Miller called, “we have to move.”
“Don’t leave me!” Leslie cried.
Miller looked back over her shoulder. Alex was frustrated and seemed close to tears. He couldn’t get the locks open, and he was frantic to find some other solution. When Miller turned back around a hulking figure was right in her face—a tall, white-haired man with a matted beard and one good eye. A string of bloody drool ran down his chin. He snapped at her with cracked dentures, muttering
unhhh hunhh hunhh…
Someone started shooting down the hall. Miller had to fight her zombie. “Alex? We’ve got company.”
“I’m coming!”
More shots. Miller fought off the old man. His dentures slipped down out of his drooling mouth. They hung from his lower lip like larvae. The sight chilled her blood. “Alex, somebody’s firing, but I don’t know whose side they’re on. You’d best hurry your ass up!”
“Leslie, I have to go.”
“I mean it,” Miller called. “Just get out here. Just lock her inside or something!”
As Miller struggled to fight off the macabre creature, another fresh zombie, the male in a police uniform, brushed past her and broke into Leslie’s room. Miller crushed the first zombie’s skull with her fist and threw it into two female creatures. She turned to look over her shoulder. Back in the room, the cop attacked Leslie. Alex shoved it away. Another followed it into the room and another after that one.
One got to Leslie.
Miller saw just a glimpse of it, a woman-thing in a gory one-piece bathing suit. Miller fought with a tall zombie soldier. She shoved it back against the wall and kneed it in the groin out of habit. The male zombie didn’t react. She slammed its head into the wall, crushed its skull and shoved it away. Meanwhile she could hear Leslie shrieking in terror. Miller looked into the crowded room. She saw Alex behind Leslie, struggling to break free. He didn’t seem to have been bitten. He burst out through the door, distress on his face. Behind them, the still bound Leslie shrieked as the cop zombie bit down on her leg. Alex slammed the door shut, locking the three creatures inside. Leslie’s last scream stopped with a gurgle. It was over.
“Follow me,” Miller said.
Alex pulled himself together. He nodded grimly.
They heard more shooting, getting steadily closer. They went out into the smoke-filled corridor. The rest of the zombie horde was almost upon them. Miller made a snap decision. She turned to the left, away from both the zombies and the gunfire. She wanted to find Scratch and get to a safe place. No other contact until she knew exactly who had just arrived and why they’d come. She and Alex made it a few yards down the corridor. Miller raised her arm and brought them to a halt. She saw figures running through the smoke and haze.
Five armed soldiers in tactical gear were coming right towards them.
Miller sighed. She had about two seconds to decide if these people were friendly. If not, she was going to have to find some way take them out. Perhaps kill one, get his weapon and turn it on the others. At least she and Alex would be armed. Miller knew she could move fast enough if she had to get it done. She’d done it before, back in Nevada, at Crystal Palace. She knew her capabilities. First, they’d have to let her get close enough.
“Hold your fire!” Miller shouted. “We’re unarmed.”
One of them put up a fist in the classic
hold
position. The others aimed their weapons at Miller and her companion. The group fanned out into a half moon. They were well trained.
“Soldier, you have one second to give me the right answer,” Miller said. “Are you here to rescue us or kill us?”
“Penny?” said the leader. It was a familiar voice. A woman. “It’s me.”
“Rat? What the fuck are you doing here?”
“Rescuing you. Again,” Francine Hanratty said. She jogged closer to Miller with a smile on her grimy face. “We’re starting to make a habit of this.”
Miller and Alex came toward her. Miller said, “Appears that way don’t it?”
“Where the hell is Scratch?” Rat said. “We’re here for both of you.”
“We got separated,” Miller said. Rat offered her water. She drank some and handed the canteen to Alex, who gulped thirstily. “I was just going to look for him, but I had to make a stop and let this ape out of his cage. You wouldn’t believe me if I told you what’s been going on around here. Or maybe you would.”
“Tell me some other time. Right now we need to get you out of here.”
“Not until we find Scratch.”
Rat shook her head. She motioned for her team to protect them against the approaching zombie horde. The men spread out as instructed. “Let us worry about that. You need to get to the helicopter.”
“I’m not leaving without Scratch,” Miller said. “You can take this guy with you—his name is Alex—but I’m going back in there.”
Rat’s men watched silently. She sighed. “We really don’t have time for this, Penny.”
“Then help me.”
“I lost you in Colorado and it’s not happening again. If Scratch is alive, we’ll find him. I promise.” Rat put out her hand. “Come with me if you want to live.”
CHAPTER SEVEN
MALIBU SERENITY CENTER
Miller stared down at Rat’s hand. The mercenary withdrew it. “Damn, you always were a stubborn bitch, Penny.”
Miller smiled. “It’s good to see you too, Rat.” She turned to Alex. “Go with this woman. She’ll get you to safety.”
“Hold on, Penny. We’re not here for anyone else but you, Scratch, and Dr. Rubenstein.”
Miller glowered at her. “Rubenstein? Why take that miserable fuck? He’s the source of the damned problem.”
They heard zombies in the distance. Rat waved to two of her men, who moved down the corridor to seal it off. “Rubenstein’s the one who called us. He’s paying the bills.”
“You’re shitting me.”
Rat shrugged. “Unlike you, I work for a living, remember?”
Alex coughed and returned the empty canteen to Rat. Watching, Miller hesitated. Something was very wrong here. “If you’re working for Rubenstein, we have somewhat different agendas. I want that sick bastard deader than Nixon’s reputation, but you’re standing there telling me you’re here to keep him alive.”
“Penny, like you said, we don’t have time for this. The taxi ride is free, but you and Scratch are going to have to share it with Rubenstein.”
Someone fired again. A man screamed. Seconds later, a pair of zombies appeared from around the corner. They saw two women in nursing uniforms, both freshly minted. One had her arms up, but was missing most of a hand. The other had half a face. They were snarling, stumbling forward, covered with filth and gore.
“Hostiles!” Miller shouted.
The mercenary team turned as one. They terminated the two zombies with what seemed to be a solid wall of bullets. Their ears rang. Smoke drifted by. Miller’s eyes burned. She watched the team of soldiers survey the hall and then relax.
“Where’s the third?” Miller yelled.
The soldiers looked baffled by her question. Miller started to explain. A scream startled her into action. Miller reached over and snatched the submachine gun out of the hands of one of Rat’s men and turned it on the third zombie who had finally emerged, a chubby clergyman with a shaved head. Miller double-tapped the creature just as it bit down on another one of the mercenary soldiers. He screamed. He stood staring down his right arm where the zombie’s teeth had sunk into his exposed flesh.
“I’m dead,” the man cried.
“Sorry, Jack,” Rat said, calmly. She raised her gun.
“Fuck you, Rat. I’ll do it.” The soldier took a deep breath. He pulled his Glock and blew his own brains out. Gore flew up the wall like modern art.
“Damn it. We needed him.” Rat signaled her men. “You ladies get her back to the helicopters. We’ll deal with things up top.”
“Just get him out of here,” Miller said, staring at Alex. “You aren’t going to arm him anyway, so he’s just dead weight.”
Alex sputtered. “I’ve done a tour or two, Penny. I can help you. Don’t write me off until you’ve at least seen me shoot.”
Miller ignored the protest. Two of the remaining mercenaries hustled Alex back out the way they had come.
Miller felt shaken. She might have lost another one of her people. But she didn’t have time to dwell on any of that. “Rat, are you and your choir boys going to follow me, or what? You can look for Rubenstein while I go after Scratch.”
“Hold on,” Rat said, while her soldiers readied themselves. “I think you’re going to at least need a sitrep before you jump right into the mouth of the dragon.”
“I’m waiting.”
Rat gave a wry smile. “Be advised the west wing is on fire. Nothing serious, but emergency services are still a ways away. Team Bravo is already on that end, searching for survivors and taking out any zombies they can corner.”
“How did they get loose in the first place?” Miller asked.
“Look, we can discuss that in the air. Right now, we have more pressing problems.”
“So, Rubenstein didn’t tell you?”
“Or he didn’t know. Anyway, we have more teams on the way in. We’ll have to deal with all soon. It wouldn’t be cool to have a volunteer fireman get bit and go home to infect the rest of Los Angeles. Anyway, I’ll have them be on the lookout for Scratch as well.”
Miller put a fresh load of ammo into a submachine gun. She gripped it tightly. “Tell them to look for a big guy with short cut hair and lots of tattoos.”
“Short hair?”
“Yeah, the stupid son of a bitch went and cut it all off.” Miller stared into the smoke. She was itching to get moving again. “I suspect he thought he was going to impress me. I think he’s already trying to grow it all back.”
“Wow, Scratch with short hair? This I gotta see.”
“I hope I get to see it again, too. Now let’s get a move on.”
Rat whispered instructions into her chest mike. Miller started walking. They moved together through the smoke and gore splatter, staying low, sliding down the hall close to the walls. Rat and her men stayed spaced apart to have proper fields of fire and distance should anyone else get bit.
Losing patience, Miller jogged ahead to lead the way. She took them all back towards the main lobby of the Serenity Center. When they were close Miller slowed down. They paused near a service elevator. Rat motioned them all to drop into a low crouch. She used her hands to signal one man to go forward and have a look down the next corridor. Miller wasn’t even breathing hard. Her pulse was pounding with unused energy. She checked the load on her submachine gun for the third time. It was a full magazine, but that only meant about thirty shots. This group of professionals would be smart, tight and conservative with their supplies. She’d need to conserve ammunition, and only ask for a reload if necessary.
The soldier crawled down the last few yards on elbows and knees. He peeked both ways, up and down the corridor. He signaled the rest of them forward. Rat got them all to their feet. They took off again. The siren was still wailing. They heard random shots from other parts of the building.
As they ran down the corridor—at snail race tempo when compared to what Miller was capable of at this stage—the stench of decay increased. Above and beyond smelling their strange body odor, Miller could almost
sense
that the undead were nearby. That odd feeling gave her the creeps. She sped up, and soon left the others behind. When she came to a waiting room, nearby a place that split into four new corridors, she held up her hand and the group stopped moving. She used her fingers, warned the others to walk carefully. They gathered around. Rat arrived first.
Miller spoke in a low voice. “There’s a boatload of zombies around here. Watch out for the triads, they set traps with one or two as bait. They can be especially dangerous.”
“Triads?”
“You see two, there’s one more hiding. You see one, he’s setting up the other two. They started doing that shit back in Colorado. It’s a mutation, I think.”
One of the men said, “Jesus.”
“Rat, just stay frosty. You’ll understand when you see it.” Miller didn’t have the patience to explain further. “Let’s go find Scratch.”
Miller took them up to the main floor of the rehab. It was a madhouse. People were running in every direction, many of them wearing the generic, egg-white Serenity Center scrubs. Some were already splattered with blood. Others may have already been bitten and were sure to spread the infection. Miller saw her country music idol helping another patient toward the exit. Most of the guards were bloody and injured in various ways. Miller didn’t sense any zombies nearby, but she kept sniffing the air. Her instincts were flaring. She knew that the original zombie virus created that awful decomp smell almost immediately, right after someone had turned. No one nearby seemed to have cemetery breath, so she ignored them. Anyone who wasn’t Scratch didn’t interest her right then.
“Let’s go.”
The smoke grew thicker, bringing more flashbacks of her experience at the lodge in Colorado. Miller could feel the heat increase as they moved through the building, getting closer to the fire. And along with that heat, the sound of screaming and the sickly-sweet smell of death. They were close, she could feel it.
“Up ahead, Rat.”
Miller sped up. She jogged down the hallway, rounded the corner—and immediately wished she hadn’t.
The next corridor was filled with bodies doing a St. Vitus Dance. It was slaughterhouse. She saw a strange mix of the dying and the dead. Miller brought the group to a halt. She quickly surveyed the twitching horde, looking for anyone who looked like Scratch. No one jumped out at her, figuratively or literally. Miller stood frozen as she tried to think of a way to get through the steadily exploding carnage without running out of ammo and getting her team killed. Something had to give. They couldn’t turn back or go forward. Miller lost a few seconds trying to decide.
Rat made the decision for her. She started firing. The rest of the team joined her immediately. They just unloaded on the horde before them. She was firing without mercy, assuming everyone there was bitten and already doomed. Body parts flew, blood splattered like garish paint, chunks of bone rattled along the tiles like groupings of white dice. Some of the shots had gone wild, hitting the zombies in the body instead of the head. The few surviving members of the horde turned their way and shuffled forward.
“Aim for the brain.” Miller and Rat shouted simultaneously.
“And watch out for ambushes,” said Miller, looking behind them and to the sides. “They can work in threes, remember.”
She turned. Sure enough, two members of a triad were sneaking up from the rear—a female in a pink slip and a male in boxer shorts. Miller swung her weapon around. She shot the two in short order. She looked for their leader.
The third appeared from the other direction. Miller blinked. He looked familiar.
It was Ramon the escort. He was naked. His lower face had been partially torn away. There were teeth missing, and his eyes were sunken and bloodshot. He was clearly a zombie now, but Miller hesitated for a second. This was still Ramon. A very strange feeling rushed through her, a mysterious kind of empathy. She had known him, and
still
knew him in a way, even though he was dead. Ramon was
real
to her. Not just one of “them.” Miller didn’t want to destroy him. She could almost feel his pain and despair.
What the hell is going on with me…?
Ramon’s head evacuated in a splash of brains and gore. He fell backwards, and that weird feeling of connection vanished.
Miller turned to see Rat still aiming where Ramon was standing a moment before.
“What were you waiting for, Penny?” called Rat. “Are you trying to get us all killed?”
The gunshots also brought Miller back to reality. She took stock of their situation. The haze and smoke seemed to be gathering into one dense cloud. The fire was dying down. The area was clear. The shouts and screams had been temporarily silenced. The room was filled with the stench of innards, blood and cooling flesh. On both sides of the corridor were what looked like offices. They’d have to check inside of those spaces and fast.
“Start clearing rooms!” Miller shouted. “Careful, there is something going on around here.”
Rat signaled her men. They followed directions. Miller turned to the closest office and pushed the door open to look inside. The room was empty. She went on to the next one. That door was locked. She almost moved on, but then she looked down at the nameplate on the door.
Dr. Arthur B. Rubenstein, Director.
Rat was facing the other direction. Miller put her ear against the office door. She could hear faint shouting coming from inside. She pounded on the door with the butt of the submachine gun. “Is anyone in there?”
“Fuck off,” shouted a man’s voice. It was not Rubenstein.
“This is no time for macho games, cowboy. You want to stay alive, evacuate the premises.”
There was some low murmuring, and then silence.
“What’s going on?” asked Rat. She stepped up behind Miller, one eye on the room to cover their flanks.
“We got a real hero in there along with your guy.” Miller turned to the door. “Stand clear in there, I’m shooting the lock off.”
Miller stepped back what seemed a safe distance. She aimed carefully and shot out the lock. She tried the knob again and this time the door opened easily. Inside was the most beautiful thing she could have ever hoped to see.
Scratch was standing inside, towering over a shivering Dr. Rubenstein, threatening his sorry ass with a fire axe.
“What have we here?” Miller asked casually, barely masking her joy.
Scratch grinned. “Penny? Goddamn it’s good to see you vertical. You were absolutely right. Dr. Evil here has been running a true house of horrors and I’ve got all the proof we need.”
“I swear to you, Scratch, I have no idea what you’re talking about!” Rubenstein’s face lit up when he saw Rat standing next to Miller. “Major Hanratty! Oh, thank God you’re here. We need to evacuate at once. Please help me!”
Rat stepped forward, Miller thought perhaps a bit reluctantly. She raised her submachine gun just enough to be threatening. “Easy Scratch, I’m going to have to ask you to stand down.”
“If you’re arresting him, I’ll stand the fuck down. If you’re rescuing him, you’re going to need a bunch of little sandwich baggies to pick up what’s left of him.”
“Major?” Rubenstein whined. “Please handle this man.”
As much as she was enjoying the scene, hell was still outside and closing fast. Miller couldn’t let Scratch take the chance of getting shot. Rat had made her orders clear.
“Drop the axe, Scratch. I’ve got Rubenstein covered.” Miller gestured with her own weapon. “We need to retreat, now!”
Scratch smiled. He lowered the axe. “This is for what you did to Penny.” He leaned over and spat in Rubenstein’s face. “Fuck you, skezix!”
Rubenstein wiped his face. He got to his feet carefully. His hands were trembling. “Can we please get out of here, Major?”