There had been no other option. You either joined them or you fed them-and they didn’t stop coming, you could run and hide but they were everywhere. There were more of them every day and less places to turn to, fewer sections of the city that the National Guard could claim were safely quarantined. Martial law. Vans cruising the street picking up bodies, the horrible penalties for hygiene offenses, for refusing to give up your dead. It kept getting worse. The Mayor had given up, they said. Certainly he had left the public eye. The only thing on television was a public service announcement from the CDC about the proper way to trepan your loved ones. Fires burning everywhere outside the police lines. Smoke and screaming. Like September 11th but on every block of the city at once.
Garypried a noodle out of the box and stuffed it between his lips. Maybe he’d suck on it until it got soft.
Maybe it didn’t have to be so bad,Gary had thought. If you were going to die anyway, die and come back… the worst part was losing your intellect, your brainpower. Everything else he could do without but he couldn’t handle being a mindless corpse wandering the earth forever. But maybe it didn’t have to be that way. The stupidity of the dead had to be from organic brain damage, right, brought on by anoxia. The time between when you stopped breathing and you woke up again, that was when it must happen, with every second more brain cells would suffocate and die, the critical juncture between thinking rational human and dumb dead animal. If you could keep yourself oxygenated, a respirator in your lungs, a dialysis machine to keep your blood moving, carrying that critical oxygen to your head… everything on battery power in case the grid went down…
His teeth bit down hard, unwilling to wait for saliva to break the noodle down. He chewed vigorously, crunching the rigatoni into fragments as hard and sharp as little knives. Put another noodle in his mouth. Another.
One day he’d watched a government helicopter, the first one he’d seen in a week, come down with a noise like a car crash somewhere in the park. For hours he watched the black smoke rise from the site, watched the tips of orange flames dancing above the skyline. Nobody went to the rescue. Nobody went to put out the fire. He knew the time had come.
With a start he realized what he was doing and spat the noodle fragments in the dry sink. With probing fingers he dug around inside his lips, feeling a hundred tiny lacerations there. He could have really injured himself-but there’d been no pain.
He needed to get out of his apartment. He needed to find more food. Real food.
Meat.
David Wellington - Monster Island
Monster Island
Chapter Six
“Epivir. Ziagen. Retrovir.” Osman went down the list shaking his head. “These are anti-AIDS medicines.”
I nodded but I was barely listening. Yusuf brought the good shipArawelo around a few points andManhattan appeared out of the clearing fog. It looked like a cubist mountain range hovering over the water. Like a crumbling fortress. But then it had always looked like that. I expected to see some kind of obvious damage, some scar left by the Epidemic. There was nothing. Only the silence, the perfect quiet on the water told you something bad had happened here.
Osman laughed. “But Mama Halima doesn’t have AIDS. You must be mistaken.”
I’d figured that as we approached the city I owed it to Osman to explain why we’d crossed half the planet only to come to a haunted city. He and Yusuf-and of course the girl soldiers-were about to risk their lives. They deserved to know. “These are my orders. Read them however you want.” Mama Halima was the only thing standing between Osman’s family and a horde of the undead. If he wanted to think she was beyond the reach of the retrovirus I was ready to let him. I wished I could just ignore the facts myself-Sarah was living under the same condition as well. If the Warlady died there would be nothing to hold the Women’sRepublicofSomaliland together. Clan factions would tear it apart. How long could a country in the middle of a civil war resist the dead?
Yusuf brought us up alongside Battery Park, past the Staten Island Ferry docks. All the boats were gone now-most likely they’d been commandeered by refugees. We cruised by a hundred yards out from the docks and headed northeast, up into the East River, passing Governor’sIsland on our right.Brooklyn was a brown shadow to the east.