Well, Dear Readers, it is with great sadness and great joy that I write you today. Since the last post, the very worst thing possible could have happened. Allow me to explain the details first.
Well, things were going fantastically and we were having a really incredible time, until just after lunch. Father Roman and I decided to wander around the plots for a while, just to see what else was around. There were families with screen tents and folding tables set up, actual tents set up, giant umbrellas and coolers and folding chairs-basically everything you’d take on a picnic or a day at the beach. There were even street vendors and booths set up, with places like KFC, Yellow Cab Pizza, and Burger King selling food all over the cemetery. Ridiculous, yes, but you know what, it was a time of celebration, so it wasn’t…that…irreverent…right?
Well everything was going incredibly swell, Roman and I were off walking around (Matt was still back at the plot), when literally out of nowhere a man came up to Roman and attacked him. We couldn’t believe it! Roman didn’t have a camera on him, he didn’t even have any money, but the man just starting assaulting him. Roman tried to push him away, and once the shock of it actually set in I came to the aid of Father Roman. We pushed him off of Roman, but he tried coming at us again. He didn’t have a weapon, for some reason he was just trying to hurt Roman. Finally, I managed to just push him to the ground and Roman and I took off at a very brisk pace, looking for one of the hundreds of security guards around the cemetery, hoping they’d help us. We kept up a face pace, but then all of a sudden Roman asked to stop. I obliged (I mean, he’s old and had just been attacked), but once we stopped he said he felt sick, that his neck was in horrible pain. I took a look at his neck (assuming maybe he’d been scratched), only to find out that it was worse. Roman had been bitten in the neck, bitten quite deep.
| Imagine yelling and screaming |
I got up to walk back to Matt, to the family. I was still in shock. I was inconsolable. I…well I didn’t know what to do. I just stood on the corner, trying to catch my breath, trying to come to terms with having just lost my friend, when I began to realize that there was chaos and panic all around me. People were running and screaming, the very cops I was looking for were yelling at the crowd, raising their guns and pointing into the crowds. But not pointing at crowds of people. I looked back to where Father Roman was lying- only Father Roman wasn’t lying down anymore. My worst fears had been realized.
How had I never prepared for this scenario? After all the research and studying and planning. After watching as many movies, after reading both of the handbooks on it. I suppose I had never figured I would have been in a cemetery, surrounded by tens of thousands of people when the zombie apocalypse actually began. It was the worst possible situation to find myself in- a giant, unfortified flat area, tens of thousands of people creating mass chaos, and the dead literally rising from their graves. In a matter of minutes the cemetery was coming back to life. So I did what I do best, what I had always planned to do. I put my survival plan into action-albeit altered due to the location, but into action nonetheless. I ran to the nearest mausoleum, one that was smaller (less bodies inside), and made my way inside. I took a quick count of my resources, only to find that all I had on me was some small bills, the clothes on my back, and my camera bag. But, thanks to the recommendation of one of the monks, I had just recently purchased a 9mm with 4 extra clips, which I had been storing in my camera bag while in the monastery. So, I now had a weapon, the mausoleum was clear of bodies already, so I began barricading it off. It had an exquisite iron fence- one that locked in place quite easily, and with that I had a shelter-for the time being. I just stood there, watching as bodies continued to crawl back out of the ground, as the tops of giant marble and granite coffins began to get pushed away.
First things first, I’d need a vehicle. I tried to look around and see if any were preferable, but most had either been broken into already or would be poor travel vehicles. Then I saw it- the backhoe that dug the graves. Though it didn’t have much for protection, it was large enough that it would plow through anything in its way, whether it be walls, cars, or the undead. It was a pretty good distance away, but I think with my 9mm I could run over there without much trouble. So I took one last look outside the iron gate, opened it up, and took off at a run toward the backhoe. All around me people were yelling, but the yells of the humans were drowned out by the ever-present moans of the undead. I made it over to the backhoe, and in the process managed to preserve most of my first clip, most of it. Thanks to my experience at camp as a Junior Assistant to the Ranger, I had a bit of backhoe experience already. I hopped up into the cab, turned it on, and took off.
Well, we started having a bit of a bigger problem- the sun was starting to set. It was still around 5:30, so there was plenty of time left to get to the monastery, and as far as I could tell, I was only about 40 minutes away, barring minimal issues. It seemed, though, that the road was starting open up, and the people in the bucket had begun complaining about the ride, that they couldn’t take the ride anymore. So, we began looking for an alternative mode of transportation. We continued driving, continued plowing a way, and then saw a construction site that was apparently closed down for the holiday. So, we pulled off the freeway, drove off to the site, and set up a quick perimeter. I couldn’t give up the backhoe, and thankfully one of the people in the bucket had driven a dump truck before. While the dump truck was a great find, the best find at the site was the crate full of dynamite.
With the power of the backhoe I pushed right through the iron gates, turned the corner, and was at the front entrance of the college. The gates, too, were closed. We yelled to the guards, told us to let us in, but they only yelled back to go away. I told them that I was with the monastery, but they fired a warning shot back at me. So, I raised the arm of the backhoe and razed the gate to the ground, plowing straight through the wrought iron mess on the ground, the dump truck right behind me. Now I had a new issue, though, which was re-securing the gates. I jumped down from the backhoe, and finally the guards recognized me. I told everyone else to head as far into the monastic compound as possible, while I got out the crate of dynamite and began getting to work. There was now a 15-foot wide hole in the outer defenses of the wall, with who knows how long until the undead would arrive.
So, I did the only thing that seemed reasonable. I placed dynamite around the foundations of the building of the College of Law, the towering building that overlooked the now-worthless gate, and tied the fuses to one long fuse. I backed away, looked at the guards, and asked if they had a cigarette. One of the guards pulled out a pack of Mild Sevens, passed them around, and gave me a lit. I took a long, deep inhale, felt the smoke enter my lungs, felt the stinging in my throat, and said, “Smoke ‘em if you got ‘em.” With the lighter I ignited the fuse, turned, and took off to get as far away from the blast as possible. As I ran, I felt time slow down, I felt as though I were running in slow motion. I flicked the cigarette off, looked back one last time before the blast, and jumped behind a campus bus that was parked in the adjacent lot.
No one could have expected the blast that ensued, could have prepared for the rubble and debris and the shock wave that came with that much dynamite, with that large of a building. But, when all was said and done, the explosion happened, and the building collapsed. We rushed forward, me with my 9mm in hand, down to the last clip after all the driving and fighting and surviving. But, the explosion had done the trick, and some. The hole in the outer wall had been completely filled by the rubble and debris, and in the process had reinforced the remaining parts of the standing iron gates. No one would be getting in now. Those gates were indestructible. Now my only hope was that Matt had made it in before I had. Again, false hopes.
We made for the inner walls of the monastery, began pulling the barricades shut, began closing and locking all the iron gates around it. They weren’t much, but at least they were something. I led the survivors into the monastery, and got them into the upper levels. I began looking around for the monastic community, wondering where they were, wondering if they had fled or were in hiding or…or where they went. I yelled for them, I yelled for Matt, but with no reply. Then, a door creaked open, and inside was the rest of the community.
Eleven. There were only eleven monks left. The rest had gone out, some to fight, some to help the dying. The only ones left were those too young to go, those too sick to go, or those too old to go. And so, with the eleven remaining monks, the twelve survivors from the monastery, and the three security guards, I began setting about the master fortification plan. We barricaded all stairways, all doorways. We collected all non-perishable goods from the pantry and kitchen. We collected all firearms from the guard station, and all potential weapons around the rest of the compound. Still, no Matt.
Two days had passed. Still, no Matt. I was beginning to lose hope, beginning to move on. Then, on the third morning since the outbreak, we heard a lot of shooting and a loud explosion outside. I raced up to the bell tower, looked down onto the street, and saw Matt racing through the abandoned cars and shops. He had blood streaking down his face, was covered in dirt and blood. But, he had made it back. Again, we had planned for this scenario, we had planned for an outsider in need of rescue. So, I tied the rope to a sack of rocks, looped the rope around one of the posts in the bell banner, and threw down the rope. I fired a shot at Matt, trying to get his attention. He looked up at me, aimed his AK47 at me in return, but then lowered it.
Instead of a bullet, I got a large, battered smile from him. I winked at him, beckoned down to the rope, and got the rocks ready to toss down. He ran up to the rope, but not before depositing a few more bullets into the brain of a few undead chasing him, put his foot into the loop at the bottom and grabbed the handhold further up. I threw down the rocks, and using an ancient, and crude pulley system, Matt was rocketed up to the bell tower. As he got up to the top I reached out, grabbed his hand, and pulled him in. Ironically, as he made it to the top the rocks reached the ground, but not before crushing a zombie on the way down. We cleaned him up, fed him a bit, and heard his story, which can be found here:
He had called in an elite fighting force, the Protectors of Eternal Death, who came to our full aid within a matter of days. We held out for two weeks, with enough food and water to last another 4 months. Thankfully, after those two weeks, a U.S.-led NATO force entered Manila, regained the city, and stopped the spread of the virus. After a two week vigil in the monastery, we were relieved, and began cleaning up after the destruction and chaos. To our surprise the monks all returned safely. It turns out they’d just been on vacation in the southern islands of the Philippines, all of which had remained untouched by the undead.
So, after all this, on Tuesday November 2nd we went SCUBA diving, my first time. Hope all is well, dear readers!
Love it :-)
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