Read Trudge: Surviving the Zombie Apocalypse Online
Authors: Shawn Chesser
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fantasy
Carl pocketed the keys. "When I start down the boom I want you two to get in the bucket and keep out of their sight."
"Big brother..
.
be careful
."
Carl scaled over the wall, momentarily paused inside of the bucket, and then climbed onto the boom, feet first with his head looking down the wall at the asphalt below.
The zombies that noticed were moaning and reaching up towards him. He felt like a canary in a cage with the big fat tomcat hungrily staring at him.
Carl took a handful of thick black grease from the hydraulic piston by his head and swabbed a liberal amount under his nose. It had a harsh chemical odor; anything was better than the stink of the walking dead.
Here goes nothing
. Inch by inch Carl lowered himself towards the relative safety of the trucks bed.
*****
Brook looped the duffle bags straps around a piece of metal protruding from the bucket and then stepped into the confined space. Thank god Raven was as small as she was; because it was getting cozy in the fiberglass bucket. Brook held her daughter trying her best to calm her. Raven was shaking uncontrollably; she had been through ten lifetime’s worth of trauma in one day. Brook feared her daughter was going to have severe PTSD if they somehow found a way to stay alive.
Carl had shimmied a third of the way down the boom, he was still a good distance from the cab. The shotgun, hanging from his shoulder, banged steadily against the boom, alerting the undead crowd of his presence. The massed ghouls were agitated and more were arriving, below him the moaning intensified.
The flesh-eaters were now three deep around the truck, their sheer numbers were causing it to rock like a boat at sea. Brook struggled to keep Raven calm in the swaying bucket.
Three immolated undead staggered around the corner, oblivious to the fact that they were on fire and headed for the utility truck. Carl didn’t want the walking torches to get anywhere near the trucks fuel tanks and he really had no desire to end up crispy like them. After a few more ungainly steps the charbroiled trio fell short and ceased moving.
We almost had a Waco moment there
. Carl had no idea why they seized up, he was just grateful that they did. Shooting three moving corpses from his position would have been nearly impossible. His best guess was that their brains must have cooked in their skulls.
Six feet separated Carl from the clamoring crowd of undead; the grease under his nose was no match for the disgusting odor that radiated from them. He had chosen the shorter of the two shotguns and had six shells loaded into the tube under the barrel. The trucks rear window was near enough that he had to choose which side of the bed he wanted to land on. The driver’s side had a few less walkers; the ones on the right were so thick that they were starting to crawl on top of each other, getting close to boarding the truck. Carl knew that if he didn’t move hastily he was going to be dinner.
A formerly teenaged zombie wriggled up onto the passenger side of the truck and grabbed for him. Carl placed the Mossberg muzzle three inches from the ghoul’s upper lip. Her undead eyes showed no hint of recognition that her time on earth was over. Hundreds of lead pellets disintegrated her face from the nose up. A new zombie emerged, coated with the others brains and exhibiting the same mindless drive. Carl racked the slide and leveled the shotgun at the trucks back window. The blast imploded the window, buckshot and sharp shards of glass ricocheted back, peppering his face. Somehow his sight was spared.
After wiping the blood from his eyes, he wedged his big frame through the opening, just escaping the reach of the persistent ghoul and its hungry mouth full of yellowed teeth. Lying on the bench seat was an awkward position for a man of his size. Getting the key into the ignition was going to be a pain in the ass, let alone trying to drive the truck like a contortionist. More zombies had managed to get onto the back of the truck and were reaching their dirty rotting hands through the shattered opening.
The engine started on the first try. Carl manipulated the tree mounted shifter into reverse and pushed on the gas pedal with his hand. The truck accelerated backwards from the store. Wrenching the steering wheel all the way to the left, he gave it more gas.
Brook had kept her head down throughout the gunfire but now that the truck was moving she risked a look. An audible gasp escaped her mouth when she saw the surrounding army of ghouls. To her horror, she saw that three of the creatures had found their way onto the rear of the truck and were trying to enter the cab through the broken rear window.
Brook chose the Remington over the Ithaca, it was heavier but it held four more shells. She racked a round into the chamber and clicked the safety off. While bouncing up and down in the bucket, Brook lined up the iron sight on the front of the shotgun and pulled the trigger. The buckshot peppered the ghouls around their heads, but did no real damage. Several walkers were sucked under the dual rear wheels and caused the bucket to violently bob up and down. Brook felt the truck start to list. The weight of the fully extended bucket had changed the trucks center of gravity. She jammed the lever all the way down to the detent. The boom started to retract and slowly lower at once. Brook’s quick thinking once again saved them all.
The two undead had gotten stuck in a dangerous place on the truck and they didn’t know how to work their way out. While they feebly struggled the enormous boom folded down on top of them and settled into its resting place. The weight of the cherry picker caused their internal organs to explode; bodily fluids coated the truck bed. The bigger one was crushed into a fetal position, its gasses escaped with a loud farting noise. The others fate was no better. The wide boom acted like a pile driver and pushed down on its head, pinning it to the diamond plate decking.
Carl had his hands full, blindly driving the big truck from the floorboards, all the while a cold clammy hand continued to claw at him. In addition to all of the superficial cuts on his face and scalp, the ghoul’s jagged dirty fingernails were gouging deep furrows into his back.
Brook was practically hanging upside down from the bucket when it finally stopped its downward movement. The remaining creature found itself trapped; it appeared to be doing the breast stroke, its pale torso half in and out of the shattered rear window. She calmly put the shotgun on the zombies exposed neck; the blast decapitated the monster, its severed head fell from the truck and bounced multiple times on the hard blacktop.
Brook noted the two squirming carcasses lodged under the lift boom. Crouching low and getting to eye level, she was astounded at how hopeless their situation was, yet they still strained and snapped trying to bite her. She racked another round into the shotgun and placed the barrel flush with the ghoul’s temple, one shot stilled it. The other monster’s head was stuck farther under the hydraulic piston that actuated the up and down movement of the arm. There was no way to safely get a headshot without damaging the hydraulic lines that snaked nearby. After chambering another shell, she buried the gun deep into the creature’s crushed chest cavity, all the way up to the trigger guard, the muzzle lodged in the ghoul’s throat. The report was much quieter than she had anticipated, but resulted in a disgusting shower of grey brain matter, blood and spinal fluid. The trapped zombie shuddered once and then went limp.
“That was the last of the bastards that were on the truck, but we’re still surrounded” Brook said as Carl's bloody head popped into view. He took in the destruction that the big truck had caused. At least twenty of the zombies were pasted to the blacktop unmoving; many more were severely injured or reduced to crawling half corpses, their arms propelling them after the red bucket truck. The truck looped the parking lot; nearly fifty of the flesh-eaters stiffly marched after. The explosion and resulting inferno at the truck stop beckoned the dead from the factory like moths to a bug zapper.
Carl aimed the vehicle towards the path of least resistance. Only three walkers were between them and the open road. The young girl zombie went under the front of the truck as if sucked into a vacuum. The other two were male they both had fresh bloody wounds. It was a perfect 7-10 split. Carl sideswiped the one in a business suit and threw him into a parked Hyundai. The utility truck clipped the last walker and sent the putrid pedestrian rolling into the gutter with multiple compound fractures jutting from its flesh.
The truck jumped the curb swaying left and right, straightened out and then raced from the corpse strewn parking lot. The brake lights flashed as it slowed momentarily and then rounded the corner disappearing from sight.
Through it all, Raven had stayed curled up on the floor of the bucket sobbing. It was all that could be expected of an eleven year old under such duress.
Chapter 29
Day 2 District of Columbia
The two HH-60G Pave Hawks of the 160th SOAR crossed the Potomac River and slowed to 60 knots. The Night Stalkers piloted their helicopters nap of the earth, hugging the grounds contour, while running dark the three hundred twenty five miles from Fort Bragg. As they neared the target the two Apache gunships gained altitude and started a racetrack pattern. Reaper Three and Four would provide over watch for the hovering Black Hawks as the Delta Teams were inserted.
Mike Desantos had never asked his men to accept a mission that he wasn’t willing to undertake himself, especially with this much at stake. He looked at his men and then looked at the darkened city through the port side window. There were no streetlights, all of the buildings looked cold and uninviting. Multiple fires reflected a red orange glow off of the river, making it look like misplaced lava. Mike saw the masses of undead lurching about the city streets, illuminated by the firelight cast from the burning buildings.
The pilot gave a thumbs up and then held his hand open, fingers spread. The silent signal let Mike know that they were five minutes from the target.
Captain Mike Desantos was the 18a detachment Commander and his 180a Warrant Officer, number two man, was Deke Clifton. Mike would be leading his Delta troops, call sign Zulu 1. The six operators would fast rope from the helicopter onto the west roof of the target. Dekes team of six Delta operators, Zulu 2, would insert on the east rooftop.
The Special-Ops pilot held the bird in a perfect, steady hover as the six operators, led by Mike, fast roped two at a time from the helos open doors onto the roof. The night vision goggles adorning their faces rendered the scene in a green glow, litter and bodies were strewn across the expansive lawn. A large helicopter sat quiet in the grass, next to it zombies were feeding on the body of a Marine in full dress blues, his white and black brimmed hat lay by his eviscerated body. The ghouls paused briefly and stared intently at the insertion taking place.
All of the men were safely on the roof. The pair of Pave Hawks, having deposited their human cargo, accelerated quickly out of sight. The undead, having lost interest, resumed consuming the fallen Marines body.
*****
Mike had been inside this building before as a guest. This time he would be breaking and entering.
Sergeant Darwin Maddox anchored a thick nylon rope onto the sturdy steel bracket that secured the rooftop air scrubbers servicing the building. Silenced H&K MP7A1 at the ready he pushed off with his back to the open air and smoothly rappelled over the edge, landing on the portico below. He went to one knee and scanned the area with his NVGs, carbine moving as one with his eyes.
Speaking in a whisper, Maddox called “clear”, his throat mike amplified the words and transmitted them through all of the team’s earpieces. Brent, Haskell and Calvin joined Maddox on the terrace. A moment later Desantos and Clark formed up; all six men were together in the alcove a mere ten feet above where the zombies roamed.
Maddox expertly applied the DET cord around the secure door frame and prepared the charge. The men turned their heads away when the cord detonated, so their NV goggles wouldn’t wash out, momentarily blinding them. The explosion wasn’t spectacular. A low rumble and a puff of smoke later the door fell inward and landed with a muffled thud on the thick navy blue carpet. The smell of death wafting from within didn’t surprise Mike.
The six men stacked up hand on shoulder, weapons at the ready and entered the glowing green room, barrels covering their zone. The room was uninhabited, but the scene was surreal. A wide mahogany antique desk, made with wood sourced from the HMS Resolute, sat facing their breach point. A secure phone and a computer with two large LCD screens shared space with family photos on the expansive desktop. The American flag was prominently displayed on left side of the desk, on the opposite was a flag bearing the presidential seal. They were in the Oval Office of the White House without an invitation.
They stood still and listened for sound or movement. They were greeted with silence.
Mike turned the knob and slowly eased the solid walnut door open, his carbine sweeping left to right. An empty hall was revealed in the green glow of his NVGs. He communicated with his men using only hand signals. Each operator had a flashing IR strobe affixed to the back of his Kevlar helmet, only visible through night vision optics.
Once again the men stacked up to enter the hall. Their silenced weapons emitted green IR beams that danced in the air. It was like being at a laser light show without the blaring Pink Floyd. The hallway was clear. The men moved in single file, spaced a few feet apart. Sergeant Clark watched their six while a stern looking portrait of George Washington watched them all as they padded down the hall, weapons and beams sweeping the corridor.