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Authors: Chris Philbrook

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BOOK: The Failed Coward
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We took a short lunch break to try out the fruit roll ups a little before noon. We shut the front door of the daycare due to the smell of the trash that had never been removed. Months old rotting diapers and food waste had only “improved” with age. Update on fruit snacks Mr. Journal: still very yummy.

Anyway, Gilbert gobbled down some little fruit chews and went inside to get a head start on getting the last bits of stuff out. The girls and I were remarking how much of a relief it was that the weather was decent, and how the place was nice and safe, when we heard a loud crash, and the world rip apart inside the daycare.

Gilbert’s AK goes to full auto, and he’d just emptied an entire magazine into… something. If you’ve ever heard an AK get emptied like that up close, it’s a pretty distinct and bowel emptying noise. I know a lot of guys who had buddies get torn open by that zipper sound. Brings back some bad memories.

I launched off the back of the Chevy and snapped up the shotgun. It was the closest gun to my hand. Patty and Abby froze for a split second, but I was in the door and heading to Gilbert like a missile. I could hear him yelling from what sounded like the back of the building, near the kitchen.

“Get the fuck! Holy jumping! Little cocksuckers!” There were a few more colorful uses of the language as well, but to retain what little dignity Gilbert has left, I’m going to omit them. I went down the hall with the shotgun up looking for Gilbert or signs of danger.

In the back near the kitchen there was a huge, floor to ceiling bookcase tipped over face down on the floor. It had fallen down somehow, and Gilbert had managed to get his toes on one foot trapped underneath the edge. He was still upright, and dangerous, but when the bookcase had fallen over, it revealed a doorway heading to the basement. The smell wafting upwards into the kitchen from the black opening into the cellar was easily one of the worst things I have ever breathed in. Even right now I’m coughing, and I think it’s just psychosomatic.

Gilbert’s spray of rounds had decapitated at least three small kids that burst through the opening to the basement. He was literally rooted to the floor at the doorway, and from below, I could see a mass of glistening white eyes floating up the stairs towards us.

All the children had been trapped in the basement the whole time. Someone had shut them down there, and pushed the bookcase in front of the opening to hide the door. I recall now seeing that the doorknob had been removed so the bookcase could slide flush against the wall.

I had a split second to make a decision. If I was wrong, or hesitated, Gilbert would be killed. Panic couldn’t happen or my friend would die. Or I might die.

Phew.

I pulled the shotgun’s trigger and sent a spray of pellets down the stairs into the dark. Some of the eyes went black and I heard little bodies tumble away into the depths of the daycare cellar. Without putting any thought into it, I racked and fired the Mossberg over and over until it clicked dry. I stepped on the bookcase to get into the doorway, which caused Gilbert to scream out in pain. He claims that was the moment his toes broke. We can’t be sure. He’s got no right to bitch at me, that’s for sure. At least he’s still alive.

I dove into the doorway, and started to reload the shotgun. Behind me I heard Patty and Abby arrive in the kitchen and start to help Gilbert. We yelled and hollered as I literally used my body to block the basement. Right about then the girls started yelling that the bookcase was too heavy for them to lift. I looked back to them to assess, and when I turned to check the basement below again, more of the white eyes had appeared. In the dark all I could see was the reflection off the milky white haze in their eyes. Creepiest thing I’ve ever seen. Easily.

I let loose a couple more shotgun blasts to buy myself some time, and I sprinted up the couple steps back into the kitchen. I jumped over the bookcase and tossed the shotgun to Abby, who caught it like a champ.

“Anything comes up the steps, blast it!” I hollered to her. She swallowed hard and jumped over the bookcase to block the doorway with her tiny body. I motioned for Patty to get the fuck out of the way, and I Hercules tossed the bookcase. It smashed in the glass window on the stove when it landed kitty cornered. Gilbert lost his balance and stumbled backwards, smashing his ass end into a kitchen counter. He yelped in pain, and called me a few very choice names, but he was free.

I think I told him to shove his attitude up his ancient asshole, and Patty and I grabbed him to help him get outside. I told Abby to follow us out. Down the hall and through the rooms we went, half helping, half carrying old man Donohue with the busted toes. Patty went ahead and opened the passenger side of the Chevy, and I got him in. I turned to make sure Patty and Abby were okay, and all I saw was Patty.

Abby never followed us out.

Patty’s face went white as a sheet when we heard my shotgun start going off inside the daycare. I told her to stay put. Sitting in the bed of the Chevy was my M15, so I snagged it, flicked it to three round burst, and headed back inside towards the sound of my Mossberg.

I don’t think I’ve had a heart attack before. I mean, I can say comfortably that up until yesterday, my heart has always beat in a normal fashion. When under stress or when I’m scared yeah sure, it hammers away. But that’s normal. When I came down the hall and saw Abby on her back, pinned to the fallen bookcase by a twenty something girl zombie with at least three or four more toddler sized undead biting and scratching at her legs, my heart completely stopped beating. See: God hates Adrian.

My heart didn’t beat again until I was done smashing them off her. I didn’t fire my rifle so close to her, I might’ve hit her. Bitten or not, I wouldn’t risk shooting her until we were safe and could wrap my mind around it. I brought the collapsible stock of the M15 down on the back of the skull of the bitch on top of Abby, staving her spinal cord apart where it met the brain. Her weight sagged onto my little girl and I started straight up punting those bitch ass kids down the stairs. One of them flew so high in the air it bounced off the sloped ceiling of the stairs before tumbling with a crunch into the dark. I don’t even remember how many I kicked.

Abby was crying and bloodied as she shoved the bitch off of her and I empted my magazine down the stairs to try and kill off the apparently never ending supply of dead kids. She stood up, and I barked out to her to go get an axe from the rescue truck. She returned with one of the heavy duty fire axes just as I made a magazine swap and squeezed off a couple bursts. I handed her the M15, and with righteous fury I took a few steps down, and smashed the top few steps apart. The little legs of the dead kids couldn’t make the jump up a few steps, and they were trapped.

I grabbed the shotgun and her, sobbing and all, and led her out. Patty took her, and I grabbed a zippo lighter one of the firefighters left in the truck, and one of the two gallon tanks of gas we typically bring as spare fuel. I drew my Glock, and headed back inside with arson on the mind.

The house took a bit to catch fire with intensity, but it did. We drove the trucks out into the road to get away from the heat, but I tell you what, once it was going good, it went up like a house of matchsticks. We could hear the fire alarms beeping from outside. Good batteries. Guess the sprinkler system didn’t survive the apocalypse though. As it burned with a terrible roar, we checked Abby for bites or wounds.

She was scratched something fierce, and had a pretty bad cut on the back of her head from being tackled by the bitch zombie, but otherwise, she was fine. Her shin guards saved her from all the bites. My mind kept repeating over and over her joke from earlier; “undead ankle biters.”

Had she not busted that joke, and I not thought of the shin guards…

Abby would be dead right now. And I might be eating the barrel of my Glock too.

Gilbert has three broken toes. They’re mangled looking, all bruised red and purple, but they should heal well enough for him to walk as well as he could before the injury. He’s got some Percocets for the pain, and he has decided that sipping on some Johnny Walker Blue Label is the best medicine, which isn’t really all that bad of an idea.

Everything was under control for the few hours it took for the house to collapse. We kept moving further and further away from the fire as it got more and more intense. Eventually the sound of our gunfire drew in shamblers, but luckily it was just a few, and Patty snapped off some .22’s and took care of them.

Once the fire subsided I asked Patty for the Tac .22, and I walked back to the smoldering hole in the earth where the daycare was. I felt safe in approaching it, as the foundation was pretty deep, and I thought the undead kids would be trapped down there anyway if they survived the fire.

Many of them did “survive. “ They were charred and blackened, many of them still smoking and stumbling around in the rubble strewn cellar. I counted ten. Once I started shooting, they all turned on me, and made a rush to try and get at me, but they couldn’t get out of the basement. It was killing fish in a barrel. Burnt, rotting undead children instead of fish though. See: Sort of. See: God hates Adrian. See: vomit. 

That’s why I’m scared of zombies that are on fire. The flames don’t kill the brain. The bodies get set on fire, and the bodies are damaged, but they’re just as dangerous as ever. Moreso if they’re still aflame. It takes far too long and too intense a flame to risk killing them with fire. I’m so glad I didn’t use fire as a means to kill them before this. The daycare was a little different mind you, being that they were trapped in the basement. This worked out, and even so, only barely. I don’t think it would work out as well otherwise.

I think officially this was our closest call with death yet. It feels like it to me. Maybe it’s because I thought Abby was bitten? That moment of despair where someone you really care about is in mortal peril? Reminds me so much of Iraq again, but this is so different. More than our lives are on the line here. I can tell that much just from my dreams.

Sigh.

We got everything back sometime around 4 or 5 in the afternoon. No one wanted to unpack anything, and it looked like the weather would hold overnight, so we brought the food in, and left everything else. I had to carry Gilbert inside too because the pain in his foot was off the damn chain. He couldn’t even support his weight walking from the truck.

After collapsing where we could, we cleaned up Abby’s scrapes and bruises, and watched her go positively schizoid looking for bite wounds. She was certain somewhere, somehow one of those little bastards got her. Fortunately, no teeth marks were found on her. It does raise the question in my mind of what constitutes a lethal bite? One tooth? Four teeth? Any form of wound caused by anything oral at all?

Shrug. Play it safe, and don’t get any injuries at all from anything anywhere near the mouth of a zombie I guess. I’m practicing zombie bite abstinence.

We have adjusted our plans slightly to allow for recuperation. As I said, we did little today, and tomorrow we plan on doing little at all again. Campus activities. The day after that I plan to head into town solo. Gilbert’s foot is very painful, and there’s no expectation that should he need to move on foot, he can. Bringing him anywhere off campus right now would be a mistake.

Patty can go with me I suppose. There’s nothing to keep her here. Abby seems… a little distraught. She’s jumpier today than she has ever been, and she seems twitchy, bitchy, and frayed. Bringing her into potential danger so quickly might start the whole PTSD cycle, and I can’t afford to lose her to that. Incidents like this make me wish Gavin and Ollie were here. More able bodies to deal with violence. Able minds? Now that’s a different question I guess.

I’m heading out on the 20
th
. If all goes well, we can start making real plans for driving a wedge into the town, finishing off the undead there, and maybe finding survivors.

I can say this with certainty today; I am less enthusiastic about children being here now.

 

-Adrian

March 20
th

 

Despite how large campus is, it astounds me how large the world is outside of it. For the most part, I have been cooped up here on campus for almost nine months now. This town is huge Mr. Journal. Gigantic compared to this frigging place. As you can probably surmise, I’m not dead, which means my trip downtown was a success. I’ve learned quite a bit about the barrio, so to speak.

Keeping with the theme of trying to make constant progress on campus, yesterday we went back to work on Hall B. We’ve ripped out the rug, the pad underneath it, the drywall and all the furniture in the room where those girls died. The furniture went on the smoldering funeral pyre, which was largely burnt out, but with the fresh infusion of grody ass lumber, has flared up for a bit. The bunk beds and dressers and chairs and desks out of that room were heinous Mr. Journal. Filthy and crusted over with thick, dark blood. Made me want to hurl just looking at the stuff.

After we tossed that shit out of the window and got it on the burn pile, I grabbed a spare window out of the maintenance storage area and we got the busted one out. All we need to do now is find drywall and new rug padding, and a rug, and some fresh paint, and the room will be good as new. I am so all over that task. I think that job has “Ollie” written ALL OVER IT.

All of the windows and doors on the basement and first level are now barred with 2x4 and three quarter inch plywood barriers. I did them the same as the Hall E barriers, so the upper window can be lowered, and you can shoot over the barrier. They’re reinforced with three 2x4s per window, and they’re attached with some heavy duty screws right into the frames of the window and house. It’d take an army to beat them down. One just about the same size as the one we repelled a few weeks ago. Maybe I need to start looking for iron bars. Hall E’s window barriers held, so they can’t be all bad I suppose. Nothing a good field test to reassure yourself of something.

BOOK: The Failed Coward
11.57Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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