Infection: Alaskan Undead Apocalypse
Infection: Alaskan Undead Apocalypse
Title Page
Part One
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Part Two
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Part Three
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
Chapter 49
Chapter 50
Chapter 51
Chapter 52
Chapter 53
Chapter 54
Chapter 55
Chapter 56
Chapter 57
Chapter 58
Chapter 59
Epilogue
Infection: Alaskan Undead Apocalypse
Sean Schubert
Published by Permuted Press at Smashwords.
Copyright 2010, 2012 Sean Schubert.
www.PermutedPress.com
This book is dedicated to my loving
and supporting family—all of you.
Part One
Chapter 1
“I love coming up here! Alaska is my favorite place in the whole world.”
Little Martin Houser truly meant what he said when he repeated his revelation, for what seemed to be the one-hundredth time. He loved coming to Alaska with his family. He was the only one in his class who had ever been to such a distinctly different place. At first, he didn’t really know what the big deal was. It was just a place after all. The more that he heard people talk about this place, however, the more he accepted that Alaska held some kind of magic. His family had been coming to Alaska every two or three years since he was born—meaning that he was now in Alaska for his fourth time.
They stayed in a beautiful deluxe cabin. There were three bedrooms, a large great room with an enormous stone-faced fireplace, a beautiful solarium off the main room, and indoor flushing toilets. This was an amenity that his mother had always remarked as the most important feature of the cabin. Personally, Martin didn’t see the big deal. He was able to do all that he needed outside in the woods, and usually did. It had just become a part of the grand experience for him. There was a loft area above the bedrooms, electricity from a very large diesel powered generator housed in a small shack outside, and even a satellite dish for television. It was better than their house.
This was an especially good year for Martin because he had been allowed to invite a friend. The decision was, not surprisingly, made the moment the opportunity was presented to Martin. He knew exactly whom he would like to bring: Danny Mahoney.
It was Danny Mahoney’s first trip to Alaska, but given that he was only ten years old, he was years ahead of most visitors to the state, who often didn’t find time in their lives to visit the state until after retirement. He and Martin were best friends from playing on the same soccer team for the past two years. Martin’s family, all five of them including Martin, were nice and generous and had readily welcomed Danny to travel with them, all except Alec, Martin’s older brother, that is.
Martin’s dad, Mr. Houser, was an ordinary man of ordinary height, ordinary weight, wore ordinary clothes, had an ordinary job, and led an ordinary life. Most people would consider him average, if not a little less than average, in all things in life. He was, however, pleasant and willing to spend time with Martin and Danny and any other kids that might be around; something many adults weren’t willing to do. Danny liked Mr. Houser and trusted him.
Mrs. Houser, Ginny, was anything but ordinary. She was about as tall as her husband but about twice his size. She was loud and easily excited and always laughing with loud, contagious, storm bursts of laughter, full of life and enthusiasm. She always smelled sweet and inviting; a combination of her ample perfume and the treats that were always in her pockets, purse, hands, or mouth. At soccer games, she always brought the best after game snacks and was known for that by all the other kids on the team.
Martin’s brother, Alec, was older by five years, tall, thin, and athletic. He played basketball all the time and teased Martin and Danny for being too short to play basketball, and for having had to settle with playing soccer of all things. In public, Martin and Danny both chafed at the insults and resented Alec, but in private they both secretly admired him and looked up to him. That admiration made it that much harder to accept Alec’s barbed comments. Alec didn’t wear really baggy clothes like a lot of his friends wore, or, more to the point; his parents wouldn’t let him wear clothes like that. He compromised, though, by wearing a series of loose fitting licensed replica basketball jerseys and buying his jeans a size too big. That was as baggy as it got with him, which was just fine as far as he was concerned. It was harder to play a sudden impromptu game if he was wearing baggy jeans.
Martin’s sister, Julie, or Jules as everyone called her, was two years younger than him. Alec had overheard a conversation once between his parents and some family friends in which Jules was referred to as a mistake. Jules was small and pretty with longish dark hair and blue eyes that usually precipitated second and sometimes a third looks from people. Her eyes were absolutely electric with life. Jules usually tagged along with Martin and Danny, which was just fine with them. She made the two of them three.
The three of them were currently running a roughly cut path through small trees and thick brush. Below them and to their right was a gray and gravelly creek bed through which coursed an equally gray and gravelly near frigid stream of melting glacial water.
To Martin, the only one of the three of them who could credibly claim to remember, it seemed that they should have already found the glacier. Had it melted? Was it all gone? He bragged about his experiences on and around this small arm of the Crenshaw Glacier. Now, with the glacier gone, would it appear that he had been only telling stories? Lies? Nervously, he started chewing on his lower lip as he ran. Where was it?
And then, there it was; part of it anyway. He could see a narrow spit of ice that thrust itself into the flowing water, as if it were the glacier’s tongue lapping at the currents. Around a bend in front of them, he could finally see a substantial sea of dirty frosty white against a backdrop of green and brown. When they got closer, they could see the deep blue hue of the dense ice as it refracted the sun’s light.
“What’s that smell?” crowed Jules through her sudden grimace.
It was an awful odor, worse than the manure smell from back home in Minnesota and worse than that rotten fish smell at the piers down in Seward. A faint breeze helped to thin it enough for them to continue on.
Danny suggested, “Smells like somethin’ died. We probably oughta watch out for bears.”
Almost on cu
e, both Martin and Danny took their small pocketknives from their front pockets and bared their shiny blades. Jules picked up a stick and held it at the ready.
“What’s that?” asked Jules, pointing at a black mass partially encased in the receding ice.
“Probably where that smell is comin’ from,” Martin thought out loud.
And then they did what kids do. They went down to the dark mass and closer to the odor to investigate and possibly poke it with Jules’ stick. Down near the creek bed and without the benefit of the breeze, the odor was nearly unbearable.
Jules, through her hand cupped over her nose and mouth, said, “It looks like a person.”
“It does kind of look like a person,” Danny agreed, “but how could a person be in the middle of this big hunk of ice?”
Martin suddenly lit up with delight. “Maybe it’s a caveman or something. Maybe we’re gonna be famous. Jules, you got your camera with you?”
Proud of herself for being prepared to contribute to their fame, she beamed, “Sure do,” and produced the silver digital camera from her backpack.
Danny asked, “How long d’ya think it’s been in there?”
Trying to sound authoritative and intelligent, Martin posited, “He’s probably been in there since the last ice age. Probably thousands of years.”
“Thousands of years,” Jules echoed.
Danny walked up and looked a little closer at the exposed upper torso, upper arms from the shoulders down to just above the elbows, and head. He had no hair and didn’t appear to have any clothes. His skin was as grey as a stormy sky, with blue veins that crackled across his arms like lightning. On the left side of his neck was a terrible tear in the grey flesh that exposed the black tissue underneath. “Looks like he’s really starting to rot. Maybe something took a bite outta him too.”
By this time, Jules had started taking pictures. Danny, getting his nerve up a little, stood right next to the find and smiled for a snap. With the blue-white flash of the camera still spreading itself out over and around the glacier like an echo, Danny was forced to duck out of harm’s way as Martin swung Jules’ stick at him. The blow went wide and landed on the ice just to the left of their caveman.
“Careful Marty,” Jules warned, “you might hurt him or something. Maybe we should go get Mom and Dad.”
“Okay, but if Alec is there we don’t tell him. Deal?”
The other two agreed enthusiastically.
Martin, as a last measure of his feat, decided that he too should be photographed next to their find, if only for posterity’s sake. He walked over and stood right next to the frozen figure and smiled. It was a big cheesy smile that stretched all the way from their home in the Midwest to there in Alaska.
Jules held the camera up and thought she saw something that was just out of the digital frame. She lowered the camera and looked more closely. Nothing. Lifting the camera back up, she snapped another picture. But this time, as the flash momentarily partially blinded everyone, something did move. At first, Martin thought that it was just Danny swinging the same stick at him, but when the teeth came down on his shoulder he knew better.
The bite didn’t break through his two shirts, but when Martin recoiled and raised his hand to fend off the attack he squealed out in pain. The frozen man was lunging desperately, hungrily at Martin. And when he got hold of Martin’s hand, he bit down hard, driving one of his few jagged, brown teeth into Martin’s soft, white skin.
His movements became more frantic, as he obviously tried to free himself and keep a tight hold of Martin’s hand. Danny came to the rescue, striking at the man’s head until he forced it to loosen its grip. Seemingly enraged, Martin’s attacker started to literally quake in the icy grip that still held it firmly, if temporarily, in place.
Martin fell onto his back on the grey, silty beach, clutching at his hand and crying pitifully, blood spilling onto his other hand and down his front, individual spots of crimson gradually forming into a single dark patch that covered his grey Alaska t-shirt.
Danny, still holding the stick at the ready, said over his shoulder, “Jules, get him to his feet and let’s get going. Jules, now.”
Shaken from her stupor, Jules gathered Martin up to his feet and helped him up onto the ledge overlooking the creek. Danny was quickly on their heels, stick still in hand.
Martin trailed blood and tears all the way back to the cabin. Even before they had gotten there, Danny started yelling at the top of his voice. He shouted for help, any help that he could get for his friend who was starting to stagger slightly.
Mr. Houser was the first to get to them, running to meet their voices just outside the clearing where the cabin sat. Martin’s mother was standing in the doorway, looking out with concern. In her hand, she still held the knife with which she was cutting the watermelon she was preparing for a snack.
She yelled from the door, “What happened, Marty?”
He stuttered, “...bit me. He bit me. I can’t believe it. He bit me.”
Mr. Houser looked to Danny for clarification, “What’s he talking about? Who bit Marty?”
Jules chimed in, “It’s true. There was a man...a caveman, frozen in the ice, and he bit Marty’s hand. He must have only been sleeping when he got frozen and woke up kind of hungry. He bit Marty awfully hard.”
Ginny, still in the doorway, shouted, “What happened dear?”
Mr. Houser answered flatly, “Something bit Marty.”
“A man...a caveman bit Marty,” Jules corrected and, running across the clearing toward her mother she continued, “He smelled really bad mommy, and was yucky all over.” She started to cry, “And when he bit Marty, he scared me.”
“Oohh, honey. It’ll be okay. Whatever it was is probably long gone by now. You’re okay and we’ll make sure Marty is okay too.” Jules all but disappeared in the warm, sweet embrace of her mother, but the security therein did not stop the tears.
By then, Mr. Houser and Danny had helped Martin to the cabin. The puncture wound was a small hole in the soft tissue between Martin’s thumb and index finger. To Mr. Houser, it really didn’t appear to be much of an injury, but try as he might to apply pressure, he couldn’t stop the bleeding. He wiped the gash repeatedly but as quickly as he did, like oil seeping up through sand, the blood returned. He’d soiled a handful of towels before deciding that something else needed to be done.
“Marty’s bleeding pretty bad here. I think we oughta get him to a hospital. He might need a rabies shot or something. Where’s Alec?”
“He’s around the other side shooting baskets.”
“No, I’m not. I’m right here. Heard him crying all the way up,” interrupted Alec. He looked at Marty at first with annoyance and then with genuine concern once he saw the amount and deep red of the blood that was all over his brother’s shirt, pants, and arms.
“What happened to you?”
Danny relayed to Alec all that had happened, fully expecting some snide comment that would undoubtedly be tied to their age and the fact that they played soccer and were too short to play basketball. He didn’t get any of that though. In fact, Alec merely nodded his head and started to think about what could be done. He remembered the Remington .410 shotgun that was inside on top of the tall bookshelf. Maybe while everyone else was taking Marty to the hospital, he could go out toward the glacier and maybe get a little revenge. Yeah, that’s what he’d do. He’d go out there and take care of...whatever was out there. How hard could it be?
Chapter 2
The trip down to the cabin had taken between three and three and a half hours. They had driven at a leisurely pace, pointing out wildlife, mountains, and anything else that caught their eyes. Danny had been excited by everything. The water to his right, the Cook Inlet he had heard it called, was so dark and cold and calm. It wasn’t anything like any of the lakes or ponds back in Minnesota. They saw white goats on the tops of the steep cliffs that bordered the twisting Seward Highway. Danny couldn’t imagine how they had gotten up t
here in the first place. A little further down, an eternity’s worth of melting running water had cut a small grotto into the rocks at the road level. In this depression was a family of three goats. The mother and two babies were only a few feet from the lanes of the highway and its rushing cars. Of course, the Housers and Danny had stopped and taken innumerable pictures. The goats didn’t seem to mind really. They just went about eating the green vegetation that was growing on and amidst the rocks. That had all taken place during the early morning hours of the day, when Alaska and its majesty was just emerging and finally wiping the last of the sleep from its eyes.
The differences between the sun rising and the sun setting is truly amazing. What Danny was coming to realize was that sunset in Alaska was very different than anything he had ever experienced. The sun was as reluctant to go to bed as his kid sister back in Minnesota, who lingered and stalled all through the house despite being told that it was bedtime. When the sun did finally find its resting place behind the mountains to his left, there was a lingering purple hue that teased the eyes with hints of darkness without actually embracing shadows in earnest. It was dark without any real commitment.
The radio was playing some forgotten song from some guy whose name, something Diamond as he recalled, was lost on him. On the way to the cabin earlier in the day, Mr. Houser would, on occasion for specific songs, turn up the volume until Ginny would look over at him and then the volume would go back down. Now, the music was barely audible and all but ignored by everyone in the van...like a lost memory that no one missed enough to actually remember.
Like the sun, it seemed that all the animals they had seen on the trip down had found their beds for the night. There were a few birds circling and fluttering over the inlet to his left, but even they seemed to be heading for their roosts, having punched out from working an avian third shift.
He watched the last bird, a white and grey gull, circle and spin out of sight. It was then that he noticed that the inlet, earlier in the day surging and filled with white-capped dark water, was now an expanse of black sand or possibly mud. He wasn’t sure of its consistency but he was certain that it looked cold and forbidding, with tiny desperate rivulets cut into its surface by separated pools of water seeking company.