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Of Sudden Origin
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CONTENTS
Title
Copyright
Preface
Part One - The Exodus is Over
Chapter One - Growing Things
Chapter Two - Summer Houses
Chapter Three - Infected
Chapter Four - Breach
Chapter Five - Shoreside
Chapter Six - Nikki
Chapter Seven - Skin Of The Teeth
Chapter Eight - Northbound
Part Two - The Search For A Cure
Chapter Nine - Tran
Chapter Ten - Stratton
Chapter Eleven - Southbound
Chapter Twelve - Barbwire
Chapter Thirteen - Touch-And-Go
Chapter Fourteen - Prisoners
Chapter Fifteen - Bunkers
Chapter Sixteen - Fingers On The Fence
Chapter Seventeen - The Floodgate
Part Three - Tribulation
Chapter Eighteen - Twisted
Chapter Nineteen - Everyday Occurrences
Chapter Twenty - Dungeon
Chapter Twenty-One - The Lake
Chapter Twenty-Two - Chicken Farm
Chapter Twenty-Three - Salvation
Chapter Twenty-Four - Bug Out
Chapter Twenty-Five - The Rite Is Wrong
Chapter Twenty-Six - Mind Fuck
Chapter Twenty-Seven - River Battle
Chapter Twenty-Eight - The Vineyard
Chapter Twenty-Nine - Dirty Water
Chapter Thirty - Release
Part Four - The Crucible
Chapter Thirty-One - Broken Fever
Chapter Thirty-Two - Boiling Point
Chapter Thirty-Three - The Wall
Chapter Thirty-Four - Safe Harbor
Chapter Thirty-Five - Inferno
Chapter Thirty-Six - Decision Time
Chapter Thirty-Seven - The Traffic Team
Chapter Thirty-Eight - Home Sweet Home
Chapter Thirty-Nine - The Scout
Chapter Forty - Suicide
Chapter Forty-One - Cold Steel
Chapter Forty-Two - Barricade
Chapter Forty-Three - Assault
Chapter Forty-Four - Heavies
Chapter Forty-Five - The End
An Excerpt from Children Of Fiends
OF SUDDEN ORIGIN
Other Books By C. Chase Harwood
CHILDREN OF FIENDS - BOOK 2 of The Of Sudden Origin Saga
OF SUDDEN ORIGIN - DOUBLE BOX SET
THE OUROBOROS
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Copyright © 2014 Christopher Harwood / Fate & Fortune Press
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This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
PREFACE
Nature encourages no looseness, pardons no errors
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
In 1999 professor of anthropology Jeffery A Schwartz of the University of Pittsburgh postulated a solution to the so-called Missing Link. He proposed, that given the poor fossil record for evolutionary graduation, that there were no missing links. He then offered an alternative to the accepted Darwinian model: Rather than life evolving through a slow adaptation to ever changing environmental factors, he suggested that evolution was actually a history of rapid genesis and extinction, with long periods of stasis in between. Schwartz used a growing body of molecular scientific evidence to show that evolution is not a progression of perceptible mutations within species, but rather a series of sudden origins, where new species burst forth upon the scene.
In 2010 Chris Venditti and Andrew Meade at the University of Reading in the UK and Mark Pagel at the Santa Fe Institute, New Mexico, followed up on Schwartz’s work, among others, with a paper published in Nature. They concluded that the Darwinian theory of natural selection (whereby, over eons, transformations occur due to subtle changes in environment) made up for only 8% of evolutionary change. While studying rates of speciation in 101 groups of plants, animals, and fungi, they used four different evolutionary models to see which model best fit evolutionary history. They concluded that 78% of evolutionary family trees came into existence via singular, rare events, such as dramatic climate change, heaving mountains, shifting lands and disease - to name just a few.
In 2004 engineers and scientists at the University of Texas at Austin and the University of Michigan successfully forced an evolutionary leap: In a process likened to natural selection, they made random alterations in the DNA of E Coli bacterium and then observed the bacterium come up with an entirely new way to make disulfide bonds – the stiffening struts that help give proteins their shape. A critical structural component of healthy proteins, disulfides keep molecules from forming into the broken building blocks of disease, such as Alzheimer’s, cystic fibrosis and mad cow. These researchers offered a new alternative to the control of disease – bioengineered evolution.
Creationists have latched on to some of the above, to support their own theory - that an intelligent being, an omniscient engineer, controls all of this – completely new creatures simply don’t spring forth from the ether; a greater hand is involved. Scientists would of course disagree; pointing out that these new manifestations are but the final result of an immeasurable buildup of genetic mutations – mutations, that when given the right environment, the right set of circumstances, will spring forth as new species.
PART ONE
The Exodus is Over
CHAPTER ONE
Growing Things
Like most prey animals, the white-tailed deer exits the womb and in moments, struggles to stand. To survive in a world where it is a delicacy on the large predator’s list, it must be able to run almost as soon as it hits the ground. In a dense forest in Northern New England, a very odd looking infant who was already on the edge of intellectualizing this, watched with glee as its mother butchered a fawn. In its own way, this baby was a creature born to survive the moment it entered the world. Within the labyrinth of connections in its fast growing brain, there was a new sense, a new skill if you will, that neither dear Mother Earth, nor God if you prefer, had ever experimented with. While its mother, and a few others around her, gorged themselves on the flesh of the still twitching animal, the infant directed Mom to concentrate on the choicest parts. Though its own sharp teeth were just breaking through its gums, and it still preferred her warm milk rather than blood marrow and muscle, it could nevertheless taste, smell and feel what its mother was eating. Everything that its mother sensed, the baby sensed as well. Its mind was connected through the ether to the others. As such, it directed its mother to eat only the choicest parts. As she gorged herself, it could feel and sense the mild frustration of the other’s around it, and it gleefully directed them to chew on the lesser bits.
As it sat on the forest floor, crushing leaves
between its tiny fists, the infant got an idea: a part of it already understood humor, and it directed one skinny male to gnaw on a hoof. The child could sense the male’s irritation, and its sharp pointy ears folded back with amusement while a large smile spread across its healthy pudgy face. It watched its legs kicking with pleasure and it couldn't help but notice how different its legs were from the others around it. This thought, like all its thoughts, immediately transferred to the mother. What was left of its mother's mind thought, Fucking odd shape. Like the thing I'm gorging on. The child's legs were hinged like the rear hocks of any fourlegged animal, only with elongated human feet; like a cat's hindquarters; built for speed.
Driving through ancient New England farmland, Jon Washington listened to the engine of his Jeep sputter with its last sips of fuel. With exhausted eyes, he scanned the old stone walls that broke up the rural landscape and thought, I don’t have a clue about growing things. When his truck finally ran out of gas on a dirt road in the middle of a forest in New Hampshire, he looked around the thick wood and decided that he was far enough from civilization to warrant a piss… standing, instead of sitting, a bottle held to his crotch, the doors locked, engine running.
He’d been driving for five days straight; the last of the police and Army checkpoints the only things slowing him down. Atlanta had fallen in early April, and when Charlotte had been compromised, he, like all refugees, kept heading north. He had paused in Atlantic City where another wall had been hastily erected. He could still reach his editors who had bugged out to New York so he settled in to gather more information, report on what he thought could be helpful. A week later, commercial communication in North America fully broke down.
In some ways it had paid off to wait until the last moment to leave; the byways of the nation were now mostly open to him. At first, working north from Florida, he had struggled with the masses, witnessing the worst of the human animal when overcome by fear. It had been so tragically cliche, so Hollywood disaster, disappointing… but so very understandable. The bulk of the population who were still ambulatory, had run in shear panic; literally driving over each other trying to escape. On the highway to hell that was Interstate 95, the number of victims of mob rule was too many to count. He could only marvel at the way that people became lemmings, the flight instinct taking over any rational thought. If they hadn’t run each other over, they’d shot at each other in pointless me-first-isms. Law Enforcement, First Responders and the Military simply couldn’t handle the mindless wave - not for lack of a plan, not for lack of trying - many a selfless soldier, firefighter and cop died trying. It was sheer numbers multiplied by abject terror. Nothing frightens a human being more than the idea of being eaten alive. Nothing stirs pure unmitigated panic in a person than the notion of being ripped limb from limb while being eaten alive by other human beings.
Jon pulled the parking brake and climbed out of the 4X4 while grabbing his police baton and shotgun, pilfered from a dead cop’s car. The two tools had become extensions of his arms since Atlantic City. His truck was loaded to the gills with other less fortunate people’s survival gear; again, being one of the last ones out made for easy pickings.
The air smelled clean. It had rained earlier and the damp pine needles mixed with ozone made the surroundings fresh and sweet. During the entire drive north he kept telling himself he’d have to grow things. The canned and foil-wrapped food he’d scavenged wouldn’t last him long. Hunting was something else all together. Other than the three Fiends in Atlantic City, he’d never shot anything in his life, and that had made him vomit.
As a reporter for the Atlanta Daily Mail, Jon Washington had been at the front lines. His ability to get information to the rest of the country was, he thought, the most important thing he could do. Information was critical in keeping the American people safe. Information was the best weapon they had.
When the Everglades containment fencing (also known as the Everglades Wall) failed, Jon Washington was there to report that the Army was falling back to the Lakeland blockade, giving citizens the time to move north behind the next barrier, officially named The Orlando Wall.
Before the Orlando Wall collapsed, Jon was among the first to note, from personal experience, that the infected had somehow gained a foothold on the North side. It was then that the WHO had gotten somewhat of a lock on the disease. It was bacterial in nature, and like the bacteria that causes meningitis, it was capable of passing through the blood-brain barrier; the vicious creature piggybacking on the very white blood cells that the body was sending to destroy it. They determined that it wasn’t just spreading from a bite or a breath; it was showing up in municipal drinking water. The consensus was that someone was doing this. It was terrorism and it was national.
When people were suddenly becoming infected in Los Angeles in late March, then Seattle and other big cities, up to that point free of “infected” behavior, it was considered terrorism with weapons of mass destruction.
The disease was dubbed Frontal Negation Dementia by a USAMRIID scientist named Andre Zacharia and shortened to its acronym FND-z. The people gave it another name, one that they could get their heads around, one that made sense given the biblical proportions of its spread; they called it Cain’s Disease – Cain: He who slaughtered his brother.
It began with an insatiable thirst that water couldn’t quench. At first, many thought it was some kind of rodent poison, but that was quickly dispelled when the victim began to behave as if he’d been drugged with a huge hit of PCP: A person, once fully succumbed to Cain’s, has a tenfold threshold for pain; muscles that once seemed fit to only lift a can of food, could now, in a short burst of energy, heave a refrigerator aside, kick down a door or grab a wrist and never let go. Fiends (as the infected became known from the phonetic of FND-z) could be anyone, even your grandmother sitting right next to you. At first she’s thirsty and then she’s begging for water, which offers no remedy as her skin grows hotter and she sweats through her nightgown. Over a period of hours she rants and raves in feverish delusion, her guts twisting in pain, agony building with frightening speed, the helplessness of the observer compounding every moment. Then a sudden calm, usually sleep, even a coma-like state. The fever has broken. Thank God. She can rest. An extra blanket is found. Another cool washcloth applied. Her color returns and her eyes finally open, and… grandma isn’t grandma anymore. With eyes and mouth suddenly dripping with desire, she offers a look that can only be described as purest evil. She’s still human, but there is nothing human in that look; a smiling rabid wolf occupies the space that was her. Laughing with lust, she attacks. She’s as strong as an ape because she feels almost no pain. She’ll snap her own bones in the struggle to gorge herself on your blood, to take a bite right out of your face, your neck, your thigh, tearing into your muscles with talon like fingers and literally shredding them off your skeleton. And this won’t stop until she’s either been shot, stabbed or beaten to death. She’s the perfect killing machine, a shark that can’t be sated. If you initially survived her attack, it wouldn’t be more than twenty-four hours before you became a Fiend as well. A bite, or getting spittle or a splash of blood in the mouth, eye, open wound, even too close a breath and it’s all over. Do yourself before it does you.
Jon stopped as he got out of the car and listened. A light breeze rustled the trees, shaking loose the day’s rain that pitter-pattered over the soft ground. He could hear a woodpecker in the distance; a good sign. Fiends tended to want to feast on any flesh: bird, reptile, fish or mammal - if it had a heartbeat, it was fair game. Most animals sensed a Fiend well in advance and fled long before they arrived with their grunts and howls, sounding like a mad troop of chimps.
The leather of his motorcycle racing coveralls creaked as he stepped onto a large granite boulder to get his bearings. Feeling relatively secure, he kept his riot helmet off to allow his ears and eyes to work better. The Moto Guzzi rig, while garish in color, did an effective job of warding off bites. The leather, with its thick padd
ing and built in skid plates for motorcycle racing, was just strong enough to give him time to maybe break loose, maybe strike out with the baton, thrust with a knife.
CHAPTER TWO
Summer Houses
The piss was downright luxuriant as he stood and relieved himself for the first time in several days without a bottle held to his crotch. As far as a good crap, he’d have to take something to help with that. An uncomfortable constipation had taken hold of him and he knew it wouldn’t let loose until he could squat and feel invulnerable.
The breeze momentarily picked up, startling him as the higher branches waved back and forth, the forest suddenly filled with noise. He instinctively zipped up and crouched, clutching his shotgun, spinning in a three hundred and sixty degree turn. Seeing himself in the window of the Jeep, hunkered down with the gun, he stopped and chuckled while standing up again.
About one hundred yards off, he spotted the edge of what looked like a lake shimmering through the trees. Grabbing his helmet and locking the Jeep, he marched in the lake’s direction. He’d been trying to get to the Canadian Wall when he ran out of gas. As foretold in every modern apocalyptic tale, all the major thoroughfares were teaming with the infected, and blocked with abandoned cars. His only choice was this backwoods escape. He hadn’t accounted for just how rural New Hampshire actually was. The last two gas stations he had passed were abandoned, the pumps turned off. He didn’t have a clue how to turn them back on. A hoped for gallon of fuel in someone’s barn turned out to be pre-mixed with oil for a lawnmower.
His GPS showed him to be shy of the border by a hundred and fifty miles; a long way to hike in rugged country with limited food supplies. A lot nicer to have a steel and glass cage around you. He needed another vehicle. The lake likely meant summerhouses. Summerhouses often meant a summer car. Unfortunately, houses also often meant Fiends.