Surviving The Evacuation
Book 1: London
Frank Tayell
Dedicated to my family
Published by Frank Tayell
Copyright 2013
All rights reserved
Whilst Bill’s journey does follow a real route through our real Britain, and whilst the series has been written (mostly) on location, all people, places and (especially) events are fictional.
Other titles:
Strike A Match
1. Serious Crimes
2. Counterfeit Conspiracy
Work. Rest. Repeat.
A Post-Apocalyptic Detective Novel
Surviving The Evacuation
Book 0.5: Zombies vs The Living Dead
Book 1: London
Book 2: Wasteland
Book 3: Family
Book 4: Unsafe Haven
Book 5: Reunion
Book 6: Harvest
Book 7: Home
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Synopsis
The outbreak began in New York. Soon it had spread to the rest of the world. People were attacked, infected, and they died. Then they came back. Nowhere is safe from the undead.
As anarchy and civil war took grip across the globe, Britain was quarantined. The press was nationalised, martial law, curfews and rationing were implemented. It wasn’t enough. The inland towns and cities of the UK would be evacuated to defensive enclaves being built around the coast, the Scottish Highlands, and in the Irish Republic.
Bill Wright broke his leg on the day of the outbreak. Unable to join the evacuation, he watched from his window as the streets filled with refugees. He watched as the streets emptied once more. He watched as they filled up again, this time with the undead. Then the power went out.
He is trapped. He is alone. He is running out of food and water. He knows that to reach the safety of the enclaves he will have to venture out into the wasteland that once was England. On that journey he will ultimately discover the horrific truth about the outbreak, a decades old conspiracy, and his unwitting part in it.
This is the first volume of his journal.
Contents
Part 1: How The End Began
Day 1, Blackout
Day 2, Looting
Day 4, The Evacuation Plan
Day 6, Almost Rescued
Day 10, The Driver
Day 12, Radio Free England
Day 26, The Light
Part 2: An Empty England
Day 35, Escape
Day 36, The Barricades
Day 40, Tunnelling Upwards
Day 48, Tamotso Yoshida
Day 59, Easter Eggs
Day 73, Brazely Abbey
Day 93, The Muster Point
Epilogue
Part 1:
How The End Began
13th March - 16th April
07:09, 13th March, Sydenham, London.
Zombies. It seems as strange to read the word as it does to write it. Perhaps, when I look back on this diary from the safety of an island or coastal enclave, we’ll have come up with a more scientific term. Until then, they. No, make that They. They are zombies. People are attacked, bitten and infected. They die, then They come back with only one goal, to attack and infect others.
My name is Bartholomew Wright, though most people call me Bill. This journal was the doctor’s idea. She said writing down my thoughts and feelings would help me vent without snapping at my loved ones. She was talking about my broken leg, of course, not the undead that have taken over most of the world.
It’s twenty-one days since the outbreak began in New York, eighteen since I returned from hospital. It is seven days since the inland cities of Britain were evacuated and less than one day since the power went out. I didn’t notice at first, not until I realised the kettle hadn’t boiled. I checked the TV, the fridge, the lamp and flicked the light switches on and off for at least half an hour. I tried each socket, plugging in every device and charger I could find, and after nothing worked I sat and stared at the streetlights, hoping they would come on. But they didn’t.
The evacuation was meant to start on the 7th March, but as soon as the twenty-four-hour warning was given on the 6th, everyone started to leave. I watched people walk by all afternoon and long into the night, some on their own and some in small groups. Some were on foot, others pushed prams and bicycles laden with all they could carry. After a day the streets were deserted once again.
They had said that the power was going to be diverted from the cities as soon as the evacuation was complete, but as the days went by and my heater worked, my kettle boiled and the nights were bathed in that familiar sickly orange glow, I foolishly came to believe that they’d left the power on just for me. But they hadn’t. The lights in London went out yesterday afternoon and I know they won’t be coming back on.
I work, or worked, as a political advisor, mostly and most recently for Jennifer Masterton MP. Jen and I have known each other since we were children. After university we set up a consultancy firm together. We were full of the usual ideas of changing the world, of ending hunger, curing disease and eradicating poverty. We planned to achieve all this through a policy shop whose only credibility came from having her father, a former Chancellor, and some of his old political friends, listed on the letterhead.
Our firm barely lasted six months, just long enough for her to include it on her CV when she stood in the Bygrave North by-election. She won by a landslide. I couldn’t believe it, nor could she. Her father couldn’t believe that she’d broken with generations of family tradition and won the seat for ‘The Dishonourable Enemy’, as he called them.
Her election meant the end of our partnership. I carried on alone and she felt guilty enough to throw work my way. I didn’t get rich, not even close, but I managed to keep the bank manager happy. As her star rose, I began to gain a small reputation of my own. Perhaps out of that same guilt, she didn’t often correct journalists when I introduced myself as the mastermind behind her success.
Jen was the reason I was walking down a Whitehall staircase at 16:30 GMT on the 20th February at the same time as an RAF uniform was barrelling up it. I was knocked flying over the banister to the cold marble floor twenty feet below. I know the time and know I’ll remember it, because that is when the reports started coming in.
I was unconscious for three nights. When I woke, I found myself in hospital on an empty ward, an armed soldier in battledress at the foot of the bed, another by the door and Jen sitting by the bedside. They were her protection detail. All Ministers now had them, and Jen had been appointed Minister for the Interior in the eight-member coalition cabinet.
Her eyes were red, and she looked oddly distant as she distractedly glanced through a folder stamped ‘Top Secret’. She called for a doctor who gave me a cursory examination that went into barely more depth than ensuring I knew who I was, where I was and that I understood that my right leg was broken. Jen dismissed the doctor then glanced around to make sure that no one but her bodyguard was in earshot, then she said that something terrible had happened. She took a computer from her bag, queued up a video, told me to watch and then returned her attention to her folder.
It took a moment for me to realise I was watching a clip from a newsfeed. Across the bottom of the screen ran a ticker that read ‘Biological Attack in New York State’, ‘At Least Ten Attacks’, ‘Weapon of
Unknown Origin’. The footage taking up most of the screen had been shot from a helicopter. When I focused on it, I saw an outdoor seating area on the second floor of a mall. A crowd was pouring out of the building, but there was no indication why. There was no smoke, no fire, just hundreds of people pushing and shoving their way onto a balcony designed to seat a few dozen. All whilst a news-anchor repeated the few scant details; an unknown threat, attacks throughout the northeastern US, the president was going to issue a statement shortly, airports were closed, and on and on. This litany from the studio only stopped when people began to jump off the roof.
The camera had pulled back to show the entire front of the mall and the mass of people flooding out into the car park. When the first bodies began to fall, they were just indistinct shapes. It took a few seconds for the camera operator to react and zoom in again on the balcony. I could make out a mismatched group of Goths and teens in high-school sports jackets overturn tables in a futile attempt to barricade the doors by a juice bar. They couldn’t see that, just ten yards away, the undead were pushing their way through a restaurant and out onto the balcony. As the barrier got higher, the undead got closer. Then one of the Goths turned around, looking for something else to throw onto their barricade, and came face to face with one of the undead.
It wasn’t like a horror film, not like any I’ve ever seen. The zombies didn’t just grab and paw at clothing, They clawed at their victims, dragged Themselves closer, biting through flesh, skin and bone.
The camera operator, safe in the helicopter, had had enough. The picture tightened on a man and a woman near the edge of the roof. They probably weren’t an actual couple. In all that chaotic confusion it’s probable that they’d never met before, and he just acted automatically out of some ingrained archaic chivalry. He pushed the woman behind him, putting himself between her and this snarling monster that lurched towards them. Its left leg dragged behind as its arms grasped at the air in front, its face masked red with the blood and gore of its previous victims.
He was a large man, well over six feet tall, who looked like he’d once been an athlete before a few sedentary decades had turned muscle to fat, but he was still twice the size of the thing creeping ever closer towards them both. I watched as he braced himself, as he straightened his back, squared his shoulders, tightened his jaw, clenched his fist and threw a right hook straight into the zombie’s face. He’d put his entire weight into the punch and it was a good one, a solid one that knocked the thing off its feet. For the briefest of moments, as he clenched and unclenched his hand against the pain of the blow, there was a look of triumph in his eyes and a slight smile on his face. It disappeared when a snarling blonde in a security uniform lurched forward into the gap.
He picked up a chair and swung it at head height, knocking the former security guard down, but then there was another and another, and a dozen more behind those. Tears were rolling down his face as he swung again and again, knocking Them down, but They didn’t notice. They didn’t even flinch. As one fell, and struggled to get up, there were always more waiting to take its place.
He couldn’t have realised what he was doing, he was totally focused on the threat in front of them, but with each swing he took a half-step back. I don’t think the woman he was protecting knew how close she was to the edge, not until he swung, pushed her back another pace and this time her foot found nothing but air. She grabbed at him, her mouth open in a scream, and as she fell she pulled at his sleeve, half turning him. That was all the opening the undead needed. As his head turned, as his eyes followed, as he saw the woman fall, as his mouth opened and his hand extended reflexively to catch her, the infected security guard lurched forward and tore at his throat.
The picture wobbled for a moment, before flicking away to the woman, now lying in the parking lot below. If the fall had killed her, then at least that would have been a more merciful death than that of her erstwhile saviour, but it hadn’t. She couldn’t move her legs, they were twisted at an odd angle. Her hands scrabbled at the pavement, her head twisted from side to side as she tried in vain to see behind her, back towards the main doors where the flood of fleeing people was turning to the slower lumbering stream of the living dead.
The camera zoomed out so you could see more of the parking lot. Bodies kept falling onto the asphalt as people jumped or were pushed. Fights broke out as cars were stolen, or people just got in one another’s way. You could no longer see the poor woman’s face. She was somebody’s daughter, somebody’s mother. Imagine watching the news - and that was the only thing on any channel - and to see your loved one…
Then it happened, the moment when I truly began to understand what it was I was seeing, how an impossible nightmare had become stark reality. One of the fallen bodies got to its knees and began to drag itself towards her. It couldn’t have been alive, not with its jaw half twisted off and a jagged shard of metal protruding from its chest. It was impossible. It was terrible. It was unbelievable, but it was happening. Someone who should be dead, wasn’t. It was clawing its way forward towards the unfortunate woman, its sole intention clear to anyone who must have seen that footage.
She must have heard it approaching. Her head twisted violently back and forth. Her hands scrabbled frantically at the concrete as she tried to drag herself away. Then her head thrashed as the creature grabbed at her ankle. She screamed as it pulled itself up her legs and began tearing at her flesh with its half-ruined mouth.
Finally the camera pulled way back, to show the shopping mall, its access roads and the industrial estate next door. Individual figures were too small to discern, it was just a great mass of humanity flowing out, some in cars, some on foot, and behind it a slower inexorable wave, growing in size as some of those who had died rose up and joined the pursuit.
When the video stopped, I looked over at Jen. “It’s everywhere,” she said, almost calmly. “There’s no cure.” Then she bent forward and whispered, “And it’s here too.”
It’s twenty-one days since the outbreak started in New York. Eighteen days since I left the hospital, seven since I saw the first evacuees walking through the street below and three since my last contact with the outside world. That was a text, sent by Jen, to say a car was being sent to pick me up. The car came. It’s still there. The driver is dead.
09:00, 13th March.
I can only see a couple of Them outside. No, three. There are three out in the open, but I think there are more in the front gardens. I can see the bushes moving slightly, but that could be the wind, right?
It took me the best part of an hour to get over to the window and I don’t know if it was worth the effort. Yes, yes, of course it’s worth it. Lack of information breeds fear and I don’t need any more of that. I had to pull myself over on the wheeled desk chair that’s about the only way to get around, save the crutches, and there’s just not enough space up here for them to be anything other than a hindrance.
A proper cast would have been nice. This thing’s like something out of the 1940s. They didn’t even pin my leg, which means when the cast does come off, I’ll be lucky if I ever walk straight again. And I won’t even be able to sue anyone. Bloody NHS! That was an attempt at humour. It doesn’t work, does it?
I just feel so trapped here, so on edge. I’ve always hated waiting. Every time I hear a sound in the distance, I’m sure it must be the car coming to take me away.
Maybe it didn’t take me an hour, at most it was ten minutes, but everything takes so much longer than it used to and seems to take even longer than that. When I do finally find a position I can be vaguely comfortable in, you know what happens? I forget the leg’s in plaster, try to move it normally and end up smacking it against the wall or the side of the desk.
I’m glad I’ve got the painkillers. Forty-three nasty little blue pills. Forty-two now. Should I start rationing them? It might be a while before I get any more.
The government car, the one Jen sent, that’s still there, just below the window. If I’d been abl
e to call her, I’d have warned her about the undead outside. I would have told her it wasn’t safe. I did try. I’ve tried since, but there’s no answer.
The mobile networks were shut down just after the footage started coming out of New York. The news initially reported that the networks were overloaded, then they claimed that the frequencies were being temporarily re-allocated to the emergency services. Jen left me a government-issue phone, one she said would work regardless of any emergency. I tried ringing every number I could remember, every number in my phone book and every number I could find written down. I found a few old magazines and called the numbers they gave for subscriptions, but no one answered. I’ve turned the phone off now. Who knows how long the battery will last? Jen knows where I am, and she knows I’m waiting.
09:40, 13th March.
What do I know about the undead? Not much. The outbreak started somewhere in New York and quickly spread. They can be killed. Technically They already are dead. Certainly They are no longer human. They feel no pain, and as far as anyone has been able to tell, They can’t communicate. They are not immortal, but They can withstand far greater trauma than any human, and They only stop when their brains are destroyed.
Someone who has been infected can live anywhere from a few minutes up to a few hours before dying. After death, They come back. How long it takes for someone to succumb to the infection doesn’t seem to be linked in any way to the severity of their wound. I’ve seen footage of people missing limbs who’ve languished in pain for hours and those who’ve received the merest scratch turning almost instantly.
Jen sent me copies of the dossiers the Intelligence Services put together, but they contained scant few facts and a lot of speculation. Most of what I know came from a fixer, whom I only knew as Sholto, via the online drop-box system we'd developed over the years.