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The New Days: The First Son
The New Days: The First Son
The New Days: The First Son
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The New Days: The First Son

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A novella chronicling one man's plight to find a safe future for his son in post zombie apocalypse America.
Nocturnal zombies sprint and howl for the blood of the few survivors that have lasted the three years since the Old Days ended.
In the New Days it's every man for himself. Kill or be killed.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateApr 24, 2011
ISBN9781458046666
The New Days: The First Son
Author

Robert Decoteau

I was born in 1974 in Bremerton, Washington. I moved to Bellingham, Washington at the age of four and have been here ever since. I love living in the Pacific Northwest about two months out of the year. The other ten months it rains. Constant rain gives me plenty of time to read and write. While I'm hooked on writing horror right now, I enjoy many other genres. My favorite author is Robin Hobb, who also lives in the northwest. She is the award winning Fantasy author of Assassin's Apprentice and several sequels. I have one son. I named him Chance. He is currently six going on fifteen. We are both currently enrolled in school, but I am a few grades ahead of him.

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The New Days: The First Son (A Zombie Tale) by Robert DeCoteau is a great surprise of a story! The surprise is how well written, thought-provoking, captivating, and complex the story is. It is partly a gory zombie tale, part examination of a father-son relationship, and part a "Mad Max" romp through a depressing dystopian future. It satisfies on all these levels. The writing is clear and descriptive. The world-building is detailed, effective and believable. And best of all, the characters are realistic, complex, and fascinating - the good guys are a bit bad, and the bad guys are a bit good. I stayed up late reading because I was so involved in the story. My only complaint was that it ended. I hope the author writes more about the New Days. I will buy everything he writes.

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The New Days - Robert Decoteau

The New Days: The First Son

A Zombie Tale

By Robert DeCoteau

Copyright 2011, Zombie Tales Press

Smashwords Edition, License Notes

This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you are reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

Monique Happy Editorial Services

(310) 326-1424

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Table of Contents

CHAPTER ONE Arrival

CHAPTER TWO Second Story Entry

CHAPTER THREE Bedding Down

CHAPTER FOUR Remembrance

CHAPTER FIVE New Plan

CHAPTER SIX Rednecks

CHAPTER SEVEN The Compound

CHAPTER EIGHT Collin Prichard

CHAPTER NINE Audition

CHAPTER TEN Guest Room

CHAPTER ELEVEN Assface

CHAPTER TWELVE Squirrel

CHAPTER THIRTEEN Chinese Fire Drill

CHAPTER FOURTEEN The Games

CHAPTER FIFTEEN Battle

CHAPTER SIXTEEN Round Two

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN Upping The Stakes

CHAPTER EIGHTEEN Killing Machine

CHAPTER NINETEEN Jailhouse

CHAPTER TWENTY Skywalk

CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE Escape

CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO The First Son

About the Author

Acknowledgements

Not going to waste too much of your time here. I would first like to thank Elizabeth, Terri, and Chance for putting up with my endless clicking on the keyboard. Second, I would like to thank Mark Tufo and Matt Di Spirito, two wonderful authors

who inspire and mentor me.

Now Read on!

* * * *

CHAPTER ONE

Arrival

I took the Iowa Street exit off I-5 and my Mack truck rumbled to a halt. Tears streamed down my face. After thousands of miles and months of traveling, we had finally made it.

I looked at my son Brock, asleep in the passenger’s seat. His lissome body was curled in the fetal position. The dirty blonde mop of hair on his head was slick with sweat. I wondered again why children become like little furnaces when they sleep. He was nine years old now. He had just turned six when the dead started eating the living. It seemed like another lifetime.

Back then, his biggest worry had been finding his library books on Monday morning. It was a lot of responsibility to foist on a kindergartner, but hey, who was going to be paying the fees for lost books? Once in a while, a book would go missing. We would have to head out to the bus stop without it and he would cry.

Brock was a child then. Plenty of times I heard people say their child was six going on sixteen. How naive those people were.

That was the Old Days, when life was an artificial thing. We worried about unimportant crap and were mindless consumers. We read parenting books written by child psychologists and pushed our children to become what society deemed was healthy and normal.

Nothing makes you grow up like searching for food and water knowing that you will die without them, all while you’re avoiding the zombies trying to eat you at every turn.

In the beginning, people thought they could sit back and wait for it to end. The military would straighten it all out. That’s what they were there for, right? Even if they didn’t, how long could a rotting corpse sustain mobility?

Well, it turns out they weren’t really rotting all that much. Whatever caused their reanimation was so unnatural that bacteria and insects avoided the infected as much as we did. The zombies dried out over time and got a little slower, but they didn’t rot.

When it all started our family was living about a hundred miles west of St. Louis, Missouri. There were four of us: my wife Jeanne, our daughter Sally, Brock, and me. Fortunately, we lived out in the sticks. After two years as a pro football player in St. Louis, I blew my knee out and was unable to return. I didn’t really have much to fall back on. I had gotten a degree in political science, but never really expected to need to apply it to anything. I settled for becoming a Phys Ed teacher while Jeanne went back to teaching third grade in a little town called Hapsburg, population one hundred and thirty-five.

It had been coming on for months. We were all just pretending it wasn’t. It’s not like you used to see it happen in the movies. In the movies, it all seemed to happen overnight. That wasn’t really the case. News flashes were all over every station. America watched with fascination as the disease spread across Europe and Asia. All international air traffic screeched to a halt and the Coast Guard rerouted all marine vessels. But life went on. Other news began to filter into the broadcasts and within a week or two you rarely caught more than a few snippets about the zombies. Most of the country still got up and went to work. Movies premiered, Obama was re-elected, and we celebrated Thanksgiving.

When the first reported cases of the disease hit our shores, it came from both sides. The media dubbed it Zero Hour. Somehow a few of the infected got into the country from Mexico and turned into the sprinting dead somewhere in East L.A.

On the other side of the continent, John Sutter, an American businessman who had been shut out of the country for weeks paid drug smugglers to get him back home. They dropped him in Miami. By the time he reached Atlanta he had turned. He bit several random people on the streets before finding his way into a nightclub.

Jeanne’s parents had gotten out of the big city just in time. I don’t know how they had managed it at their age. Harold had cataracts and Audrey wouldn’t drive their old Pontiac over forty miles per hour. As soon as Zero Hour happened, they jumped in the car and worked their way to us.

The infection spread rapidly on both coasts after that. Most Americans saw it as something that was happening somewhere else to someone else. In those days, there were still people trying to donate to the Red Cross, like a few bottles of water and a blanket would fix the problem. Churches filled up no matter what day of the week it was. Survivalists bragged about having predicted it all. But no one really did anything.

Obama and the top members of his cabinet evacuated D.C., that’s when Americans finally woke up. Hollywood had conditioned us to wait patiently for that fateful sign. In all the disaster movies, that was when it was time to tuck tail and run, only by then there was nowhere to go.

The disease, infection, or virus was everywhere, and thanks to the Internet and the unregulated crap that was presented as fact, the populace didn’t have a clue how to protect themselves from it.

By the end of December, everything was gone: TV stations, phones, radio, Internet, and then finally the power grid. Unmanned nuclear reactors melted down. Unregulated turbines at dams seized up causing the dams to break, flooding the towns and farmlands below. The human race was thrown back into the dark ages, only this wasn’t the bubonic plague that was spread by rats. This plague had conquered the world. All told, it was seven months from the first reported case to the fall of civilization. The last few radio broadcasts finally released the estimated death toll that had been kept from the public: More than ninety percent of the world’s population was dead.

The Mayan calendar ended and so did the civilized world. Doomsayers had predicted several ways it could happen, but I never heard a single theory involving a raging undead army scouring the streets clean of the living. There were the religious nuts that popped off with scary ‘rising dead’ quotes from the Book of Revelation, but I doubt any of them took it literally.

So here we were, at the far corner of what had been the United States of America, less than fifty miles from the Canadian border. I stared out the truck window at the sun, estimating how much time before it set. Amazing how good you get at that when your life depends upon it.

These aren’t vampires. The zombies are fully capable of abiding sunlight, but for some reason they come out in droves at night. I figure it’s has something to do with their dehydration problem, but I’m no scientist.

Less than two hours until nightfall. We needed to find a place to hole up for the night, maybe get some food in our bellies. I took a left and started weaving through the abandoned and dilapidated cars strewn about like the floor of a kid’s messy room. I had rigged a snow plow on the front of our old dump truck. It came in handy when the road was completely blocked and when zombies were dumb enough to wander into the streets investigating the noise of our big diesel.

Grass and weeds grew up out of the cracks in the pavement and on the vehicles where dust had collected in pockets and crevasses. The wind had swept dirt up against building walls where seeds had taken root. Mother Nature was doing a decent job of taking back the world we had been abusing for thousands of years.

I saw a Dairy Queen on the right and thought about how much I missed ice cream. The windows were all busted out and the sign that had once been a bright red bonfire of welcome was dirty and faded. A vivid green moss stained it, streaking down its face following the trails from frequent rains.

On the left, down the road a stretch was a McDonalds. Those Golden Arches were like a headstone for the way of life that had died in the latter months of 2012. Now any type of food we could scavenge was our Happy Meal.

Are we there yet? Brock asked as he woke and rubbed his eyes.

I smiled at the age-old question. I imagined for an instant that my boy was still a child and we were on a family trip. But we didn’t have a family anymore. In the entire world, we only had each other.

Yep, Bellingham, Washington, I said with cheer that I didn’t feel. Getting here had cost us so much.

I don’t see an ocean, he said as he scanned the streets over the large flat hood and bulky snow plow.

The bay, I corrected. It’s about a mile more to the southwest.

So we’ll be on the boat tonight? he asked, excited.

No kiddo, tonight we are going to find a place to lay low and get a bite to eat. Tomorrow we will collect some supplies and get a real good boat and be on our way.

But we’re so close; can’t we just go have a look at the bay?

Well, I suppose, if you’re willing to skip dinner we could go have a look. I tried to play serious, but my son had long since learned the finer points of my sarcasm.

D-a-a-a-d, he said, stretching the word into an admonition. Let’s look for dinner down by the water.

Always the problem solver.

I shifted gears and headed west. The road maps we were using didn’t depict grocery stores, but after three years, most of them had already been picked clean. As survivors go, there weren’t that many of us left. In the beginning, we were still Americans and acted like Americans. We hoarded or wasted our resources with no thought of future needs. I guess most people thought it was silly to plan for a tomorrow they most likely wouldn’t see.

I stayed on the wider main streets scanning for signs of danger, not from zombies mind you, but from the living. People in the New Days had become territorial and greedy. Outsiders were often met with violence.

Killing a man for his truck, his weapon, or his dinner was more common than bartering for them. In rare cases, you could be killed to become dinner.

There were rumors of cannibalism in every camp we encountered. It was always the people in the next valley or the next town over.

Food had become scarce. Meat was a luxury, so people withered away. Many suffered from malnutrition and had come to resemble the zombies. I sometimes wonder how many people are killed by friendly fire just because they’re thin and ragged looking.

I have been hungry, and Lord knows I’ve seen my family on the brink of starvation, but I couldn’t live in a world where we had to resort to that. I couldn’t eat human meat and look my son in the eyes. I couldn’t ask him to do such a vulgar thing. I was a good provider before the New Days and I’d been a good provider after.

While others ransacked liquor stores and restaurants, I was looting from GNC and Payless. Body builders used protein supplements. The tubs of protein tasted awful, but they kept us healthy and fit.

Dad, I see it! Brock exclaimed, bouncing on his seat and pointing.

We had never made it out to the coast in his normal life before the world died. He caught his first glimpse of Bellingham Bay. I blinked away tears that threatened to fall at the wonder in his eyes.

The sun sparkled off the bay like a beacon of hope. The yellow shimmer off the water was the finish line we had spent the last eight months running towards.

I shivered inside at the thought of all we had lost. Our exodus from America’s Bible Belt had been a grueling tribulation.

The first to die had been Jeanne’s parents, then Jeanne, and finally our daughter, Sally.

If I squint I can see the island, Brock said.

I squinted in that direction. Was that a hazy outline of trees? I couldn’t be sure.

That’s the right direction, I said. Keep your eyes peeled for a likely place to set up for the night.

I coasted the truck through the burned out section of downtown. All of the cities had burned to some degree. Almost every city across the country had suffered from raging infernos. Some burned from the initial invasion, people escaping their homes and forgetting to turn off the stove. Several cities didn’t get the natural gas shut off in time. In those places, the fires had devoured everything, laying waste to major metropolitan areas.

There had been little or no response from the fire departments. What could they have done? Most weren’t equipped

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