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SYMPTOMATIC: An Apocalyptic Horror Thriller (MADNESS Chronicles Book 3)
SYMPTOMATIC: An Apocalyptic Horror Thriller (MADNESS Chronicles Book 3) Read online
Contents
Copyright
Prelude
Madness Part III
01 - The Vote
02 - Ted
DAY TWELVE
03 - TJ
04 - Molly
05 - In the Air
06 - New Crew
07 - Flavio
08 - Speed
09 - Meet Up
10 - The Parasitics
11 - Agust
12 - Ship Reps
13 - The Island
14 - Wayfarer Lounge
15 - Ted
16 - A Deal You Can’t Refuse
17 - Otto
18 - Flavio
19 - Entropy
20 - The Trade
21 - The Explosion
22 - Violet
23 - Coordinated Attack
24 - Last Stand
25 - Jaga
26 - Engine Room
27 - TJ
28 - Tomas
29 - Flavio
30 - TJ
31 - Eloise
32 - Tomas
33 - Orders
34 - After Effects
35 - News
36 - The island
37 - The Meetings
38 - New Life
Epilogue
A Quick Word From The Author
Is This Really the End of MADNESS?
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SYMPTOMATIC:
MADNESS Chronicles III
M.L. Banner
Copyright © 2018 by M.L. Banner,
All rights reserved.
SYMPTOMATIC is an original work of fiction.
The characters and dialogs are the products of this author’s vivid imagination.
Most of the science and the historical incidents described in this novel are based on reality,
and so are its warnings.
No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.
Published by
www.toesinthewaterpublishing.com
Prelude
When the Rage Began
Before the earth-rattling crash, twelve year-old Dominic Sanchez cast his fishing line into the bay. Almost immediately he got a nibble.
His audience was two of the multitude of stray cats which populated his island. Each meowed its anticipation at what it knew would be coming soon.
“Hey Pedro,” he said to the scrawniest of the pair, “hang on. Let me reel ‘em in first.”
Little Pedro continued his pleading, rubbing up against Dominic’s leg for added measure, to remind Dominic that they were waiting to be fed. The larger of the two cats, Beatriz, sat patiently, knowing that Pedro would do the begging for both of them.
Dominic yanked on the rod ever so slightly, snagging the hook deeper into his prey. When he knew he had it, he reeled in the fish. From the line’s light drag, he suspected it wasn’t very big. And barely a minute later, he pulled the little thing out above the water, where it flopped spasmodically.
“Good news, Pedro. You and your wife eat first. This one’s too small for me.”
Pedro and his mate both mewed in anxious anticipation.
The palm-sized Corvina was expertly unhooked and tossed to his two furry friends, whirring behind him. The fish bounced once on the wood dock, before Pedro and Beatriz pounced on it. Each immediately snagged a piece from the fish, before nearly a dozen other cats dashed onto the dock to join in the feeding frenzy.
“Hey fellas,” Dominic yelled at the approaching clutter, scooting away the biggest of the bunch, already attempting to not only take the remaining Corvina, but the pieces his buddies had pulled from it. “Don’t be greedy. Pedro and Beatriz have first dibs on the little fish. And then I get the next one.”
Pedro and Beatriz held tight to their tidbits of food and bolted away from the now lifeless carcass, and the swarms of fur around it.
Dominic re-baited his line, getting ready to cast once more. He figured this time, he’d set it out much farther, where the larger schools of fish should be. Hyper-extending his arm over the frantic felines battling for the bony remnants, he shot his friends a quick glance before relaunching.
Pedro ignored the world, already preening himself after inhaling his small but satisfying first meal of the day. Beatriz seemed riveted elsewhere, probably longing for what was coming next.
This time, Dominic put his whole body into his cast, sending his line perfectly into the air.
He snapped his head forward in the direction his lure should land, then immediately convulsed; his shoulders stiffened, his mouth slacked open.
The weighted hook bulleted through the air, targeting its mark perfectly. But on its downward arc, it bounced off the steel hull of a giant fuel barge headed straight for him.
He was so stunned, he let go of his pole and it too sailed outward, plopping a meter or so away into the small bay.
The cats and he scattered down the deck, sure the barge would hit them at any second.
The moment he had turned to run, his ears were assaulted with a grinding noise of metal against sand, and then rocks. Halfway down the wood dock, he was buffeted sideways, and his ears were pummeled by the sounds of boards splintering into thousands of pieces.
Dominic did his best not to trip and fall, while the longer-than-he-ever-remembered dock twisted below him even more.
When he reached the point where the dock’s twisted wood met the concrete breaker, the torturous noises had already subsided. He turned to see how far away it was, instantly relieved. The black barge had halted midway through the partially destroyed dock. His breathing became erratic with worry, as he scanned for a sign that they were okay. Then behind the sea wall, a calico tail tentatively approached, telling him his friends were fine.
After a long minute, when there was barely a rattle or squeak from the incoming tide’s pushing the stationary ship against the mangled dock, Dominic began to wonder why there was no activity on the deck of the barge. He’d seen this very craft come into the town’s small port a few times. The moment its mooring lines were accepted, the small crew would buzz around topside like ants at a picnic. Dominic studied these things because he was going to be a captain of a ship when he grew up.
He glared at the dead ship before him and was surprised that still no one appeared to come topside to see where they had crashed. Where are they? They couldn’t be asleep, could they?
Dominic spun around to see if anyone else had heard the crash, still not sure what he should do next.
He was all alone.
The creaking and rattling from the ship’s hull rubbing against the dock almost felt like it was offering him an invitation to come on board. He had never been on board such a large ship.
Not being one of those boys who only read about things in books, Dominic started back down the dock. But because of the crash, the wood dock had been pushed up in an incline and now led all the way to the deck of the awaiting dead ship at the other end.
Dominic’s skin tingled at the thought that maybe everyone onboard could be dead for some reason. Perhaps the captain had died of a heart attack: old people were always dying of heart attacks. The cool breeze taunted his crawling skin further. His imagination produced an image of what the captain’s dead body might look like, draped over the pegs of the ship’s steering wheel.
An upturned board and his lack of attention caused Dominic to stumble.
It didn’t slow him down. Dominic leaned
into his ascension and mounted the dock’s steepest incline, which appeared to lead directly to the ship’s edge. It looked like he could literally walk right onto the ship’s forecastle, which was his plan.
Without even looking at it, he passed by the familiar stenciling on the ship’s side, announcing, “Ramirez Fuel Services SA, Punta Delgado, Spain.”
Once at the newly created dock-edge, now bunched up and ragged, he hopped over the two inch span and landed on top of the deck. He froze and listened for someone to tell him to leave. Anyone.
He’d never been on top of a fuel barge, not really having any interest in this type of ship: he wanted to captain a cruise ship or a large luxury yacht. His only boating experience so far was rowing a neighbor’s small row boat.
Other than the ship rubbing against the broken mess of what was left of their dock and a stiff breeze whistling its own tune, all Dominic heard was Pedro’s purring right below him. This ship is a ghost town.
He shuddered at this thought.
His gaze drifted down to his buddy, about to ask if he was ready to explore the ship, when he noticed he was standing in a large puddle of red, starkly cast against the ship’s white decking.
It was blood. Lots of blood.
~~~
Vila de Corvo’s PCP Police Chief, Salvadore Calderon, slammed the door of his Skoda. Almost immediately he blew out an exaggerated whistle at the sight before them. “Well Tomas, here’s one more thing you wouldn’t see on the mainland.”
Tomas Novo, the youngest of his two agents, who had pleaded with him to be released into a larger, more exciting police unit on the Portuguese mainland, said nothing. The young man adjusted his hat and waited for his superior. When Sal took up a place beside him, he too gawked at the wrecked hundred-year-old dock and the ship that caused the damage, wedged into the middle of it. Tomas asked, “Do you think she’ll leak?”
“I’m more worried about why I don’t see any of the crew, and what caused the crash,” Sal said. His voice scattered into the wind as he stomped onto the dock. It felt as if it was moving with the tide.
Sal considered his own questions, and then wondered if this day could get any stranger. He and his agent had just returned from investigating two separate animal attacks and then a report of some crazy woman killing her husband. Now this. Their small station was barely two kilometers away. So when they heard the crash, it seemed like the whole town had poured outside of their homes and shops to see what all the clatter was about.
“Tomas, get on your radio and have Val call Ramirez Shipping in Puento Delgado. See if they know their ship has crashed onto our shore.
His junior agent started hollering inaudibly into his radio, while Sal mounted the inclined dock, which ended at the starboard bow of the ship.
Sal tried to block out Tomas’ voice to listen for any other sounds. Other than the wind and the creaking of ship against the broken dock, he heard nothing.
When Sal hopped onto the barge’s deck, he immediately knew something was very wrong, and drew his service Berretta in response.
Tomas hollered something else into the radio and froze beside him upon seeing his superior’s drawn weapon.
Sal pointed, without saying anything. A puddle of blood and the bloody sneaker prints of a child led toward the open doorway a few meters ahead.
When they heard a little boy’s scream, they both went running.
They followed the bloody trail, but with each of their footfalls, Sal felt his anxiety spike. Twice he glanced back at Tomas to confirm it wasn’t some hallucination. He felt like he was seeing things lately, so maybe he was imagining some of this. Each time Tomas met his gaze with the same “this is some crazy shit” look, he knew it was real. He wanted to say to him each time, “Well you wanted some excitement… here it is.” But he held off saying anything until they finished running the insanely long distance from the bow to the doorway.
It was an entrance into the bowels of the ship, where the blood-trail stopped. The door swayed slightly from the ship’s rocking motion, forced upon it by the incoming tide.
Sal was a little out of breath and was relieved when looking back, that his young agent was as well.
“It sounded like a male child to me,” Tomas stated, obviously trying to smooth out his own growing anxiousness.
He was right, it was a young boy, and the shriek sounded familiar to him as well. He probably knew this kid, because he knew everyone in their town. “Follow me,” he said and then glared at his deputy. “Don’t shoot unless you have to.” He didn’t want to get shot in the back by the nervous young man.
Tomas nodded, holding his service weapon down with both hands.
The entrance led into a dark stairwell, which almost immediately descended into a dank murk. A blinking light below flashed a momentary view of the emptiness.
An animal screeched a hollow bray, like it was injured and angry.
It was close.
Sal had a sinking dread that this might be another animal attack, although he had no reason to connect the two attacks on his island with this crash. His heart began pumping ample amounts of adrenaline to his systems. Something else seemed wrong.
Was it him?
In all of his years in police work, he remained safe by being careful to avoid risky situations. Only when one of his men was in peril did he put himself into peril and then, only after he waited for the last possible moment. He felt different now. He felt like he didn’t care, even if it was risky. Worse, he was looking forward to whatever was down there. His heart pumped happily; his chest heaved joyfully. He should have been terrified, just like his agent was.
Then he heard another bray, much closer now. A form appeared in the yellowish light of the flashing strobe. It wasn’t an animal. It was a man. It was Old Man Ramirez, the captain and owner of this ship. Ramirez lifted his gaze up the stairwell to meet Sal’s and screeched at him. Sal knew then that Ramirez was making the animal sounds he had heard, like he was the animal. Ramirez’ eyes blazed red like two turn signals with each flash of light; they appeared to blink at him. Ramirez then turned and disappeared.
Sal didn’t hesitate. He stepped into the darkness.
Madness: Part III
“Your eye is the lamp of your body.
When your eyes are good, your whole body also is full of light.
But when they are bad, your body also is full of darkness.”
Holy Bible, NIV, Luke 11:34
01
Eleven Days Later
The Vote
“It’s their blooming eyes,” Boris bellowed. His face twisted into a frown, which Chloe Barton couldn’t see in the darkness. “Their damned red eyes. That’s how you know they’re animals.”
“But they’re not animals, they’re still people…” Chloe pleaded. “They’re infected with a disease and they’re just not in control of what they do.”
“Suppose you’d say the same thing about pedophiles: it’s not their fault, they don’t know what they do. So what? Should we feel sorry for them because they’re diseased?” This came from an officer on the other side of the group. She didn’t know him.
Chloe sighed, feeling like she was swimming against the current in a river of piranhas. “I’m not saying that. I’m just saying that killing them all isn’t the answer. And it’s not who we are as people.”
Boris burst out of his aluminum chair, almost knocking it down. “Hon, I’m saying that’s exactly what we are. The sooner we kill all of the parasitics, the better. For all of us.”
“Shhhh. Someone’s coming,” one of their group huffed.
Every one of their group held their breaths. All heads turned to see who it was. A single set of footsteps, barely heard over the stiff sea breeze, grew louder with each footfall. Someone was definitely coming their way.
Chloe shrank back into the group, not really wanting to be seen by anyone, especially another officer. As the head of the ship’s medical clinic, it didn’t feel right to be at a Resist Parasi
tics meeting. She glanced at the faces, most cloaked in shadows. She knew many of them; it was hard not to, with so few of the original crew left. Some she didn’t know, because they either worked in areas she’d just never visited, or they were originally passengers, like Boris.
She was amazed by people like Boris, who she understood to be infected with the parasite which had turned many men into monsters. He just hadn’t become symptomatic yet. But he could at any time. Then what would he do, order his own death? Highly doubtful. It was just his fear talking.
They were all fearful, especially of what lay ahead of them. It seemed like they had some control of things, but this control felt tenuous at best. So everyone wanted safety and they were willing to sacrifice anything to get it, including every sense of morality they had. Well, she wasn’t going to be a part of this. She didn’t have an answer yet for their parasitics, but she wasn’t going to stand for genocidal murder. It just wasn’t right.
The footsteps were almost upon them, now echoing off the pool decking.
A few of the craned necks retracted back from the edge of the outdoor movie theater screen, seemingly satisfied with the footsteps’ owner.
“It’s just Bohdan. He’s one of us,” said someone she couldn’t see.
Bohdan Oliynyk was a despicable man, of the lowest order. A Czech from engineering, he’d been in two days ago, complaining of a sore throat. When Chloe said that she was in charge of this medical center, he refused to leave until a male doctor would see him, saying that he never trusted the words of a woman who wasn’t even a doctor.
Luckily for Chloe, a male nurse, who was a passenger volunteer, saw him, diagnosed him as having acute pharyngitis, and gave him some antibiotics and sent him away.
She had hoped he would have remained sealed in engineering. She shrank further into the darkness.
“Good timing, Bohdan.” Paulo from security and the organizer of this meeting spoke up. “We’d just been discussing whether or not we should treat the crazies like good, misunderstood people or just kill them. We were close to voting. Do you want—”