Authors: George A. Romero
“That's a whole other study,” Berman cut in. “They're tryingâ”
“But if we knew that, we could . . .” Dr. Foster moved toward the edge of his chair and gestured with the middle finger of his right hand.
Berman immediately reacted to the gesture and then realized that it was unconscious on the good doctor's part.
“We don't know that,” Berman countered. “We don't know that. We've gotta operate on what we
do
know.”
Francine's eyes shifted from the electronic argument to the pandemonium in the room. Copy people ran wildly with teletype sheets; secretaries organized the stacks of bulletins as they arrived into the different reporters' boxes. Yet besides the seemingly organized reactions there were others: people frantically scrambled all over the room, tripping over cables and generally getting into each other's way.
“I'm still dreaming,” said a voice, and for a moment, in her drowsiness, Fran thought she had said it. Then she realized it was a man's voice. She turned toward him. It was a young man she had never seen before, someone that Tony had awakened on his rounds.
“No, you're not,” Fran said gently.
“My turn with the coat,” said a young woman whom Fran recognized as the style and arts editor. The woman held out a cup of coffee as an exchange for the heavy overcoat that had served as Fran's blanket. Fran accepted the coffee gratefully and thought to herself: what a story, “what the well-dressed woman wears to a national disasterâa mangy old overcoat!”
“The guys on the crew are getting crazy,” she told Fran confidentially. “A bunch of 'em flew the coop already. I don't know how much longer we'll be able to stay on the air.”
The woman wrapped the overcoat around her and settled down for a nap. Fran staggered over to the control consoles. The technicians seemed to be cracking under the pressure of confusion and chaos.
“Watch camera two . . . Who the hell's on camera two, a blind man?” one screamed.
“Watch the frame . . . watch the frame . . .” another mumbled, as if to himself. “Roll the rescue stations again.”
“We got a report that half those rescue stations have been knocked out,” said the first one, “so get me a new list.”
“Sure,” said his partner belligerently, “I'll pull it outa my ass.”
As if she were a sleepwalker, Fran stood transfixed in the middle of the newsroom, mesmerized by the madness surrounding her. A sudden feeling of helplessness overwhelmed her as she realized the hopelessness of the situation. Her attention was drawn again to the conversation over the monitor.
Sidney Berman loosened his tie with a chubby hand and thrust his chest out.
“I don't believe that, Doctor, and I don't believe . . .”
“Do you believe the dead are returning to life?” Dr. Foster asked pointedly. The power of his words, which were being sent over the airways, sent a shock wave throughout the entire newsroom. They had been reading those words all dayâbut to hear themâit gave them a new solidarity, a new reality.
“I'm not so . . .” said Berman, a bit more subdued. He half sensed the finality of the doctor's words, too.
“Do you believe the dead are returning to life and attacking the living?” Foster repeated.
“I'm not so sure what to believe, Doctor!”
At the studio, a few doors down from the newsroom, a sense of panic was overtaking the crew. Disgruntled murmurings were heard. This wasn't a television seriesâthis was real life!
“All we get is what you people tell us,” Berman was bellowing. “And it's hard enough to believe . . . It's hard enough to believe without you coming in here and telling us we have to forget all human dignity and . . .” Berman wiped a sweaty brow with the back of his hand.
“Human dig . . . you can't . . .” the doctor sputtered.
“Forget all human dignity,” Berman repeated as if pleased with the solemnity of the phrase.
“You're not running a talk show here, Mr. Berman,” Foster said indignantly. “You can forget pitching an audience the moral bullshit they want to hear.” The doctor's calm exterior suddenly seemed to shatter.
“You're talking about abandoning every human code of behavior, and there's a lot of us who aren't ready for that, Doc Foster . . .”
The furor of the crowd of stagehands and cameramen grew to a fever pitch. A great cry of assent went up from the studio floor. The doctor's glasses were now sliding halfway down his nose, and he was frustrated at the abominable pomposity of the talk show host and also flustered by the apparent agreement of the audience and crew. Stagehands and cameramen left their posts and came at him with clenched fists, swearing and calling him names. Police guards tried to control the mêlée inside the studio and to prevent people from storming in from the hallway.
Fran stared dumbly at the control panel and the uproar on the screen.
“Frannie,” a man called, “get on the new list of rescue stations. Charlie's receiving on the emergencies.”
Fran managed to pull herself away from the ludicrous scene on the console screen. She fought her way through the heavy traffic of panicking people and reached Charlieâa harassed typist who held the receiver of an emergency radio unit under his chin.
“Say again . . . can't hear you,” Charlie was saying into the receiver.
“Rescue stations?” Fran asked, leafing through the sheets of paper on Charlie's desk.
“Half those aren't operative any more,” he told her as he tried to take notes from the speaker on the other end. “I'm trying to find out at least about the immediate area. We've had old information on the air for the last twelve hours.”
“These are rescue stations,” Fran said with concern. “We can't send people to inoperativeâ”
“Say again, New Hope . . .” Charlie repeated as he took down the information.
He handed the notes to Fran. Still listening to the receiver he said, “I'm doin' what I can. These are definite as of now. Skip and Dusty are on the radio, too. Good luck.”
He patted her on the backside as she gathered up the sheets from his messy desk and moved across the room.
At the console, she stopped and said to the technician at the controls: “I'm gonna knock off the old rescue stations. I'll have the new ones ready as soon as I can.”
“Givens wants 'em on,” said the gruff technician with a big beer-belly and graying hair.
Fran always had trouble with this one. He resented a pretty young thing's giving him orders. She had spoken with Mr. Givens before about this man's chauvinistic attitude. Apparently, he had ignored any warningâif there had been one. But now was not the time to raise his consciousness.
“We're sending people to places that have closed down,” she said firmly. “I'm gonna kill the old list.”
As she moved toward the other control room, an armed officer stopped her. For a moment, she tried to get by, thinking he had brushed her by mistake.
“Hey, she's all right,” Tony said as he rushed by with copy.
“Where's your badge?” the young officer asked insistently.
Fran reached for the lapel of her blouse instinctively. To her surprise, she found the badge was missing, and she was sure she had pinned it on securely this morningâor was it yesterday morning? The days, hours and minutes were all jumbled in one terrifying moment of confusion. If she stopped to think about it, she knew she would panic. The only thing to do was to keep busy, trying not to rationalize the horror going on outside the studio.
“Jesus,” she shouted.
“She's all right,” one of the reporters said as he passed by.
“I had it,” Fran tried to convince the officer. “I was asleep over there . . .”
She pointed toward the mound of sleeping bodies across the room.
“Somebody stole it,” the reporter told them both. “There's a lot of 'em missing.”
He turned to the officer. “She's all right. Let her through.”
Reluctantly, the officer stepped aside, giving both Fran and the reporter a deadly look.
The two of them moved down the crowded hallway and into a small camera room. It was as though they were in the subway at rush hour. The hallway was wall-to-wall people.
“I don't believe it,” Fran told him as they tried to make their way down the hall.
“One of those little badges can open a lot of doors. You avoid a lot of hassles if you got a badge . . . any kind of badge.”
“It's really going crazy,” she said, more to herself than to the young man, as they reached a small camera installation. The camera was aimed at a machine that was rolling out a list of rescue stations. The list was superimposed over the live broadcast as it went out.
A red-haired cameraman turned to Fran as she entered.
“You got new ones?”
“I gotta type 'em up. Kill the old ones.”
“Givens wants 'emâ”
“Kill 'em, Dick. Tell Givens to see me!” she said with finality. Now was not the time to let these guys get away with murder. When it came to making decisions, she was the boss.
The man clicked off the camera and picked up his cigarettes, clearing away from the controls. Fran moved toward the studio. As the list of rescue stations blinked off the monitor, she noticed the debate was still going on between Berman and Foster.
Fran walked down the center aisle and found an empty seat at the end of the fifth row from the stage. She practically collapsed into the seat, feeling for the first time how physically weak she really was. The doctor had told her she would start to feel tired, but she hadn't given it much thought in the past few days. The only reminder she had was her constant nausea.
Berman was holding court: “Well, I don't believe in ghosts, Doctor.”
“These are not ghosts. Nor are these humans! These are dead corpses. Any unburied human corpse with its brain intact will in fact reactivate. And it's precisely because of incitement by irresponsible public figures like yourself that this situation is being dealt with irresponsibly by the public at large!”
As if on command, another outraged cry went up from the stagehands and observers.
“You have not listened,” Dr. Foster tried to outscream the cries. “You have not listened . . . for the last three weeks . . . What does it take . . . what does it take to make people see?”
Fran took a deep breath and pushed herself out of the comfortable seat and moved into the large studio area, surrounded by the wires and mikes and cables of the live presentation. The uproar was deafening. She stared at the two speakers as if they were puppets.
“This situation is controllable,” Dr. Foster said in a pleading tone, holding his glasses before him as if he were making a peace offering. “People must come to grips with this concept. It's extremely difficult . . . with friends . . . with family . . . but a dead body must be deactivated by either destroying the brain or severing the brain from the rest of the body.”
Another outburst shattered the studio. Over the outcry Dr. Foster tried to be heard.
“The situation must be controlled . . . before it's too late . . . They are multiplying too rapidly . . .”
Fran could take no more of the aggravation, watching the poor helpless man try to convince a bunch of yelling and pushing lunatics, urged on by the frenetic Berman, that what he was saying was for their own good, for the country's good.
She moved off through the crowded room to another emergency radio installation. Skip and Dusty were there, trying to listen to their receivers. They jotted down notes hurriedly.
Fran came up to the two young men quietly, not wanting to disturb their intense concentration.
“Operative rescue stations?”
“They're dropping like flies,” said Dusty, who looked more like a cowboy off the range than a TV reporter. “Here's a few. You know, I think Foster's right. I think we're losing the war.”
“Yeah, but not to the enemy,” Fran said philosophically. “We're blowin' it ourselves.”
In a gesture of friendship, she offered what was left of her lukewarm coffee to the two dedicated men.
“Not much left, but have a ball.”
Both Dusty and Skip were grateful for a sip of coffee. Fran rushed off toward a large TelePrompTer typing machine.
Over the din of the station, the broadcaster's argument could still be heard. “People aren't willing to accept your solutions, Doctor,” Berman argued emotionally. “And I, for one, don't blame them.”
“Every dead body that is not exterminated becomes one of them! It gets up and kills! The people it kills get up and kill!”
The doctor's hair was disheveled. His eyes were wild as he tried to get his point across. But, it was a hopeless battle. The audience and Berman just didn't want to understand. They wanted to be pampered, to believe that by magic their government would chase “the bad people” away and the next morning on the news everything would be happiness and light and football scores and sunny weather. But, it just wouldn't be like that again, at least not for a very long time.
Fran handed the list of active rescue stations to the TelePrompTer typist, and then she rushed back toward the control room.
There was havoc around the monitor consoles, and the commotion was made even more lunatic by the angered Dan Givens, the station manager.
“Nobody has the authority to do that. I want . . .” he was bellowing angrily. As Fran came around the corner, he spotted her, but continued his tirade:
“Garrett, who told you to kill the rescue station supers?”
“Nobody,” Fran intervened. “I killed 'em. They're out of date,” she said simply, trying to steady her nerves.
“I want those supers on the air all the time,” Givens roared, his already red face turning a deeper shade of crimson.
“Are you willing to murder people by sending them out to stations that have closed down?” Fran demanded.