Race to Refuge

By ElizabethSCraig

156K 12.8K 2.4K

When the world crumbles around you, how do you keep hope alive? Mallory, escaping a damaging relationship, st... More

Chapter One: Mallory
Chapter Two: Ty
Chapter Four: Mallory
Chapter Five: Ty
Chapter Six: Charlie
Chapter Seven: Mallory
Chapter Eight: Ty
Chapter Nine: Charlie
Chapter Ten: Mallory
Chapter Eleven: Ty
Chapter Twelve: Charlie
Chapter 13: Mallory
Chapter Fourteen: Ty
Chapter Fifteen: Charlie
Chapter Sixteen: Mallory
Chapter Seventeen: Ty
Chapter Eighteen: Charlie
Chapter Nineteen: Mallory
Chapter Twenty: Ty
Chapter 21: Charlie
Chapter Twenty-Two: Mallory
Chapter Twenty-Three: Ty
Chapter Twenty-Four: Charlie
Chapter Twenty-Five: Mallory
Chapter Twenty-Six: Ty
Chapter Twenty-Seven: Charlie
Chapter Twenty-Eight: Mallory

Chapter Three: Charlie

7.4K 533 133
By ElizabethSCraig

Charlie

I finished my new-employee orientation at the hospital. It was as boring as I'd figured it would be and I was ready to move on to the rest of my first day on the job. The reason I'd switched from being a salesman to being a paramedic was because I was ready for more excitement. The sales job, despite all the travel...the endless airports and planes...just wasn't providing that.

I joined my new coworker, Wes, at the ambulance parked in the hospital lot. We shook hands. He grinned at me and arched an eyebrow. "How was orientation?"

"Boring," I admitted with a laugh. "I was ready to get out of there."

Wes shook his head. "Just be aware that this job is ninety-five-percent total boredom."

I asked, "And five percent adrenaline, right?"

Wes said, "We go on tons of calls where no emergency help is required at all. We think we're about to get rescued from a dull shift, but then it ends up being something like a fender bender and somebody with a couple of scratches." He glanced at his watch. "We'd better get in the truck. Do you want to drive?"

I hesitated. I'd thought I'd really be more observing today. "Do you want me to?"

"I've been driving my last couple of shifts and could use the break. Do you mind?" Wes was already heading to the passenger seat.

For about thirty minutes, I could see what Wes was talking about. Nothing was going on in this town. Apparently everyone was driving safely, using excellent fire and stove safety, and treading carefully down staircases. Wes closed his eyes and leaned his head against the window. While sitting there waiting for a call I started checking the gig for equipment and familiarizing myself with where everything was. "Wake me up if anything happens, okay?" Wes mumbled.

Then something did happen. Our computer console on the dashboard notified us of a call. "Hey Wes," I said. "I think we're about to have our five percent excitement for the day."

Wes became fully alert quickly and his eyes scanned the data terminal for more information as I started up the truck to drive to the scene. "Huh. This sounds like a weird one, too. You always remember your first call, but this one sounds like one to remember anyway. The 911 call says some man was attacked by a person who started gnawing on him. Victim is in bad shape and needs transport to the nearest hospital."

"A person started gnawing on them?" The siren was going and my blood was pounding. It felt good to be here, good to be on my way to help out. This was what I craved.

"That's what it says. Someone mentally disturbed I guess. The neighbors came out and chased him off and called the cops." Wes's voice was uncertain. "You know, I thought I heard something on the news on the way over here. A similar report somewhere else."

"Maybe some kind of weird gang activity? Like an initiation or something?" I asked.

Wes just shook his head. The rest of the time he only spoke to let me know when the intersection was clear on the way to the scene, just a few blocks away.

It was a quiet neighborhood—ordinarily. But today was different. It looked like all of the people who lived there were either standing out in the street watching what was unfolding, or else they were looking out of their windows and doors. Their faces were tight and scared.

We pulled up, lights still going on top of the ambulance and hopped out, running with a jump bag and stretcher to the victim who was surrounded by a group of people.

Wes, although he was an Advanced EMT, was giving me information about the victim in short sentences. Still breathing. Seems to be in shock. Needs tourniquet. We worked together fast to treat the victim and get him into the ambulance.

One of the neighbors wouldn't stop talking. I was so focused on our patient that I wasn't even listening. Then something she said finally sunk in. In a guttural voice, she said. "Look at him. Look at him! What's wrong with his eyes?"

"He's in shock," muttered Wes. He and I loaded the man onto the stretcher. But I looked closer at the victim's eyes. They were glazing over with a thin gray membrane. The victim was thrashing around on the board and we had to put restraints on ... with some difficulty.

"Easy there," said Wes in an even voice.

We rolled him into the back of the ambulance. Technically, since I was the paramedic, I had more training than Wes, who was an Advanced EMT. But there was no question that he had the most experience. Wes automatically climbed into the back with the patient. The patient stopped moving. Wes looked at me. "I've lost a pulse. I'll try to keep bringing him back ... just get us to the hospital."

I hopped behind the wheel, blaring the siren as I sped to the hospital. Without Wes to tell me I was clear, it was pretty terrifying going through stoplights at those huge intersections. But then I started hearing crashing sounds in the back of the ambulance and that terrified me even more. I had a dead or, at the very least, dying patient in the back. What could be making those sounds?

Should I pull over and check? Even though I needed to get this guy to the hospital before he ended up having to go to the morgue? There was a crash right behind my head and this time I spared a glance over my shoulder. I saw Wes, palms splayed on the glass partition between us. His eyes were covered with a thin, gray membrane, his mouth was slack, and he was covered with blood ... and snarling. I turned back to glance at the road, and when I turned back to look at the back window, our victim was staring hungrily back at me. Whatever soul that had made it human before was gone now.

There was no more indecision. I felt no responsibility to the creature in the back now. My mind grappled with using the word zombie, but it wasn't long before I accepted it, at least mentally. Although I'd like to think that I had a responsibility to Wes as a coworker, the truth was that the thing in the back was fast turning into something that wasn't Wes at all.

I decided to abandon the ambulance and drive myself back home. If I could get away from Wes and our patient before they attacked me, that is. Looking at the buttons on the driver door, there didn't seem to be a way to lock the back doors of the ambulance from the front. But I was pretty fast when running on foot. I hoped Wes and the patient weren't very fast.

I pulled the rig over to the side of the road. Clearly it would be irresponsible of me to bring these creatures back to the hospital to inflict harm on helpless patients and staff. The side of the road was a better option, despite the fact it meant I'd have to jog a long ways to my car.

Now the road was full of emergency vehicles. Police cars were screaming by, lights flashing, along with other ambulances and fire trucks. It seemed like too many rescuers for a car wreck, house fire, or other more ordinary emergency. Was this zombie threat spreading? How fast? Did I even have a shot at getting back to my house?

As soon as I stopped, I yanked the keys out of the ignition. I was thinking maybe I could lock the back of the trunk manually before Wes and the patient could get out. Then maybe I could radio in and warn people about what was in the back before they could check it out and get hurt.

But the second I stumbled out of the ambulance, so did the things from the back. They lurched toward me, mouths open.

So I hopped right back into the truck, locking the doors with a shaking hand, and took off before they could get back into the back. At least they didn't seem to have superhuman speed.

I'm not ashamed to admit that I had my siren on, too. I wanted people to get out of my way. My plan at this point was to hightail it back to the hospital, dump the ambulance there, ditch the rest of my very first day as a paramedic, get into my pickup, and get back to my house to figure out where to go from there.

Plan B was born the moment I got to the hospital and saw zombies had taken over the parking deck and were coming out of the hospital entrance. Driving over to my truck, I saw a couple of zombies standing right there. They became very animated when they spotted me through the ambulance windshield.

That was when I decided the ambulance was going home with me. And wondered if this was the worst first workday in all of employment history.

***Special note: Race to Refuge is currently free for a limited time  on Amazon:  http://amzn.to/1SCKnHa . 

"Race to Refuge" under pen name Liz Craig is releasing now on Amazon (at http://amzn.to/1SCKnHa ) , Nook, Kobo, CreateSpace, and other major retailers. I'll post a chapter each week, but if you can't wait, please visit one of the listed retailers for the completed book. Follow me on Twitter (elizabethscraig), sign up for my newsletter for a free ebook at http://eepurl.com/kCy5j , or visit my website at Elizabethspanncraig.com for more information. Hope you'll enjoy the book.  


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