Read Dead Hunger: The Flex Sheridan Chronicle Page 1




  Book 1 of the Dead Hunger Series

  Dead Hunger:

  The Flex Sheridan Chronicle

  By Eric A. Shelman

  Dead Hunger: The Flex Sheridan Chronicle

  By Eric A. Shelman

  Copyright 2010

  Dolphin Moon Publishing

  This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to your favorite ebook retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

  All characters contained herein are fictional, and all similarities to persons living or dead are purely coincidental.

  ISBN 9781466045866

  Prologue

  Jamie Leighton. Redhead, 5’8” tall. Fair skin, slight build. Pretty green eyes, and long fingers.

  Anything – no, everything – but ordinary. But to the casual observer, there was nothing extraordinary about her. Most of the time she was Baby to her husband Jack, Mom to her two girls, Jesse, 8, and Trina, 6, and she was just beautiful to me. I miss her.

  When she first turned, the aftermath was terrifying. I swore I’d help her if it was the last thing I ever did. Turns out it wasn’t the last thing or the first thing or any goddamned thing, because there was and is a shitload of stuff to do and it never seems to get to be a smaller shitload.

  I’m Flex Sheridan. Jamie used to share my last name with me. My baby sister.

  I’ll tell you how this started. The process will introduce you to me and my friends, but your guess will be as good as mine as to what comes next for us in this bizarre new world. Any other time I’d sound crazy as shit, but if you’re reading this, then you know I’m not.

  The dead have risen. Either that or they never quite made it into the ground, but either way I’ll tell you this: They’re out there and they are hungry. And getting hungrier every day. They are persistent. And they have more ingenuity and instinct than I’d have ever given them credit for in the beginning.

  And they have some abilities that concern us greatly.

  I’d started using the term abnormals to describe them because Jamie’s one of them. As much as I knew they were similar to – fuck that, they were zombies and there’s no way to get around it – I couldn’t bear calling them that name. It seemed to be disrespectful to my sister. Hemp and Gem humored me in that respect initially, but we all eventually gave up the ruse. Zombies they were, and zombies they would ever be until intense brain trauma.

  But even in the beginning, in the heat of a good fight, we all slipped the Z word occasionally. I sure as hell didn’t treat any of these zombies with any semblance of the kindness that I gave my sister. Not even close. And my sister was so not my sister anymore.

  I’ve been reluctant to use the word zombie, because I don’t want to give this recount of our experiences anything like a comic feel. There’s nothing funny about it, and again – if you’re alive to read this, then you know that already. There is not much laughing going on these days.

  Nowadays the only person who can make me laugh is Gem. Gemina Cardoza is her full name, but she hates it. Says her name sounds like a syrup spokesperson. So she goes by Gem, which is fine by me, because she is my precious gem, that’s for sure.

  She’s out rounding up supplies with Charlie right now. You might wonder, in a world where zombie-like creatures are wandering the earth, why I’d let her go with someone else besides me. That’s because you don’t know Gem, and you don’t know Charlie. If you did, you wouldn’t wonder. I’m wearing the other half of our two-ways, and if they get in any trouble, I’ll get a double-tap on the talk button. That means they’ve run into some of them. If I get a triple tap next, that means they’ve dispatched them by bullet or arrow, and we’re back to cool.

  But if I get a single tap first, or after the double tap, that means COME NOW WE’RE FUCKED and that means no time for punctuation or mixed case letters.

  We carry automatic weapons and other fun toys, and we’ve got pretty good experience using them. Heck, we’re even teaching the six-year-old how to handle a gun, and surprisingly, she’s coming along pretty well. Nonetheless, none of us have gotten killed or wounded yet, and we’re skilled enough that we don’t waste a lot of ammo.

  Fuck if I didn’t knock on some wood after I wrote that just now.

  If I hear a single tap on that walkie, or even think I heard one, then as many of us as are left at the base head out fast. We have an itinerary. I know where they’re going. We have flare guns, too. I know where to look and when I see the flare, I head for it. Our vehicles are fortified and fast, and we make good time. We’re always heavily armed when we’re out in the wild world.

  We got each other’s backs. In this world, you need a partner or you’re dead. Gem is mine. And I’m hers.

  And now we have little Trina and of course Bunsen and her brood. But that’ll come later. That part should be told a little at a time.

  Hemphill Chatsworth is one of us, part of our posse, if you will. He goes by Hemp and he’s British. That doesn’t mean anything to you or me, but I’m telling you to explain his name. He’s definitely not southern born.

  Hemp’s 32 years old and he’s a scientist. He’s got two degrees that have come in very handy since the plague, or whatever you want to call it, came along. He’s got a Biology degree with a major in Epidemiology. He couldn’t have gotten that shit more perfect except that he also got his Engineering degree. Mechanical engineering. So not only did the son-of-a-bitch want to know how the human body worked, he wanted to know how machines worked and how to design them. His mind works in images. We talk about something we need – in particular, something to wipe out large numbers of zombies at once, and he visualizes it; creates it in his mind. We’ve yet to build any of them, but Gem, our resident artist, has laid out some sketches of his equipment, and I know they’ll be effective. These raw blueprints are structured in his mind’s eye, and Gem’s hands help make them a buildable reality.

  With Hemp’s two degrees, clearly his parents had too much money, but now he’s ours; mine and Gem’s, and nobody better ever try to take him away from us.

  And it’s only recently that we met. But if he tries to leave, we’ll either follow him or kill him. Okay, I’m kidding there. Killing him would do no good, but that’s how strongly we feel about Hemp. We’ve got a good partnership, though, and if he needs something, Gem and I are going to do our damndest to get it for him. Either way, he’s not going anywhere without us. The guy is a genius, and we can use a good genius for like – forever.

  Go ahead. Picture him. You’ll be wrong. The guy looks just like a So-Cal surfer. He’s around 5’10”, sandy blonde hair, muscular. His father was half Irish and half Indian, so he has dark skin, but his mother was a petite blonde, so he’s got that towhead thing going on. And he got his mom’s blue eyes. So far he’s borderline single, but it looks like that’s about to change. The right woman for a guy is definitely harder to come by these days, but Gem and I are thinking that’s worked itself out.

  Yep. Charlie’s a girl. I think I’d like to tell that part of the story in order, too. But suffice it to say she loves her heavy metal rock, she is proficient with a crossbow, and we’re pretty sure that Hemp digs her. And besides that, Gem and I are convinced that her apprenticeship with Hemp in the lab isn’t solely because she has a fascination with science.

&nbs
p; Wow. All that shit happened in less than four days. Unbelievable.

  So you’ll meet Charlie later. But with or without a woman, Hemp has his lab, and it really is his world. Like a kid at Disneyland, he has to force himself to leave it, or be dragged out.

  No radio taps from Gem or Charlie so far, and that’s good. If they double tap me, I won’t be good for shit until the triple comes. In fact, I’m already about to jump out of my skin and into my truck.

  So while Gem and Charlie are out hunting-gathering, Hemp’s in the mobile lab, and I’m working on this, you ought to get to know me. I’m writing this down, and I’m trying to include all the words exchanged between us along the way so you can see how we dealt with things. This was all new, so we had nothing at all upon which to base how we should react to anything that happened.

  Now, we’ve got lots to do, so there’s not a ton of time for me to get into the beginning of this – well, my beginning. Everyone’s is different. Equally horrible, I’m sure – I don’t have any copyright on that shit – but different.

  With a name like Flex, people remember me. But just because of the name. Physically, I’m nothing too oddball. Six feet tall, medium build. 45 years old. I got a square jaw and a goatee, green eyes. I keep my hair trimmed short because Gem or I do the cutting and it’s easier. Overall, I’m your generic American male.

  Jamie was born about six years after me. She’ll be thirty-nine on her next birthday, but one way or the other, I’m pretty sure she won’t be celebrating it.

  Right now I’m in Georgia, back home. And since it’s July, it’s hot. But just over three days ago, when I first found out that Jamie needed my help, I jammed to Florida. And since I can only tell this part of the story from my perspective, then that’s what you’re gonna hear. Brace yourself.

  It’s fucked up.

   

  CHAPTER ONE

  Flex Sheridan’s Chronicle

  Late June, 2011