Table Of ContentSLOW BURN
Torrent
Book 5
A novel
by
Bobby Adair
http://www.bobbyadair.com
http://www.facebook.com/BobbyAdairAuthor
Cover Design and Layout
Alex Saskalidis, a.k.a. 187designz
Editing & Proofreading
Cathy Moeschet Lindsay Heuertz Linda Tooch
Rebecca T. Dickson
eBook and Print Formatting
Kat Kramer
A special THANK YOU to these readers of the series who were kind enough to
volunteer a slog through a typo-infested early draft of the work and give me their
thoughts.
Jackie Bauerelen
John W Van Deusen Julie Carrigan Christy O'Neil
John Cummings
Previously, in Slow Burn:
Book 1 – Zero Day
Zed Zane wakes up hung over one Sunday morning and begins to fortify
himself with vodka before going to his mother’s house for lunch – and to beg for
rent. There, he finds his mother and a neighbor dead, and his stepfather in full-
throttle, crazed cannibal mode. Zed, fighting for his life, kills his stepfather in a
scuffle, during which he sustains a nasty bite wound.
He tries calling 911, but the line is perpetually busy. That’s strange, but no
stranger than the way that Zed is beginning to feel. He spends the next two days
unconscious with a raging fever, and awakens as what soon becomes known as a
“slow burn,” a carrier of a virus that destroys higher brain function and turns
people into vicious, flesh-eating monsters.
Together with Murphy, a fellow slow burn who escapes with Zed in the
aftermath of a prison riot following his erroneous arrest for the murder of his
parents and their neighbor, we follow Zed on his quest for shelter, resources, and
a plan for living in the strange new world in which he finds himself.
Although Zed himself has not “turned” completely, as have most of the
other infected, the ambiguous, not-immune-but-not-dangerous category in which
he finds himself will from this point forward direct his every thought and step if
he is to survive.
Book 2 – Infected
Book 2 – Infected finds Zed, Murphy, and their traveling companion, Jerome
on the move again following what proves to be a brief respite in a university
dormitory, in the company of some extremely, albeit justifiably, paranoid ROTC
students and three coeds, one of whom befriends Zed. In the process of stealing a
Humvee, Jerome is shot by soldiers and Zed and Murphy head on alone to find
Murphy’s family.
With Murphy’s mother dead and his sister missing, their next stop is a house
rumored to feature an underground survivalist bunker, where another surprise
awaits.
Book 3 – Destroyer
Book 3 – Destroyer finds Zed saying goodbye to one friend and pressing
forward with two new ones to whom we are introduced in Book 2 – Infected.
Mandi, whom Zed and Murphy rescued from the bunker, is immune to the virus.
Russell, whose home the others plundered in search of food and other supplies,
is also a slow burn, but lower-functioning, childlike and docile.
After seeing the carnage at the dormitory, a raging, vengeful Zed wants only
to kill Mark, his nemesis and the former leader of the ROTC squad. Since Mark
has disappeared, Zed unleashes his fury on untold numbers of infected in his
path as he makes his way back to the hospital, in an attempt to rescue Steph, a
nurse whom he befriended while seeking help for the feverish Murphy shortly
after the prison riot. But the brave medical staff, holed up on the tenth floor of
the hospital, and running out of provisions, has decided to take matters in hand
by exposing themselves to the virus, and shooting those who “turn.” Zed is
determined not to face another loss, but once again, time is running out…
Book 4 – Dead Fire
Book 4 – Dead Fire picks up following an infected attack on Sarah
Mansfield’s fortified house, during which 3 people seek shelter with Zed Zane
and his fellow survivors. In the confusion, however, Murphy is gunned down,
and an unthinking, emotional Zed strikes out to enact revenge. Unfortunately,
the shooting and commotion have only attracted more Whites. A diversion plan
emerges to rid the horde of the Smart One trying to figure a way through the
gates, and lead the other infected away from the compound. Momentarily safe,
the survivors turn to the matter of where to bury the dead. Zed, being now the
only one available who would not attract the attentions of the infected,
accompanies Freitag on this morbid mission. In short order, Zed is once more
embittered and hardened against trust, when he finds himself stranded. After a
series of developments that prove the Whites to be more formidable foes than he
ever dreamed, he finds his way back to Sarah’s house to find the compound
overrun with infected and his friends mysteriously vanished without a trace,
leaving Zed to rely once more solely on his wits to survive…
Chapter 1
In the pontoon boat, Murphy and I had been drifting with the slow current of
the river for a few hours. We passed a row of mansions built onto a manmade
peninsula just upriver from Sarah Mansfield’s mountaintop compound. That’s
when we spotted our first Whites, glimmering in a sheen from a light rain in the
morning’s gray light. At least forty of them squatted in a tight huddle in the short
brown grass under the backyard oaks of one of the estates. Silent.
As we neared, I saw many had oozing burns flaking with blackened skin.
Some had faces scorched so badly that all human features were gone. Skeletons
wrapped in immolated flesh, by some vicious miracle, not yet dead.
It was difficult not to see them as the people they used to be. In that
moment, it was harder still. Without the howling or attacking, chasing and
killing, they were docile. Suffering with the most human misery on their faces.
Tragic eyes pleading for mercy. And, in a curse perhaps worse than any other,
the virus left them with the capacity to know their wretchedness and wallow in
their tears. Naked on the bank, they looked like refugees waiting for the mercy
of sepsis. It was growing in the pus under their scabs, soon to assist death in
finishing its work and ending their torment.
No doubt they were burned as a result of my work. But in my imagination—
as that gasoline vapor bomb came together—I thought only of them blowing up,
disintegrating in a supersonic rush of hot gases. Even afterward, when it was
clear the blast had been a dud, I hoped the resultant blaze would burn them,
make them suffer. Just as they were, on the edge of the river. But while wishing
the horror of fire-seared flesh on another living creature was relatively easy in
the abstract, the reality felt as though something from the blackest depths of my
hate had come to swallow what was left of my soul.
I turned away from the dying Whites and sat down on one of the pontoon
boat’s long, padded benches. The motor wasn’t running—we were conserving
fuel on our downstream journey—but Murphy was at the helm, alert. I looked
ahead into the distance for a while, trying to let the gentle splashes of raindrops
on the river bring me comfort. But before long, I found myself sitting up
straight, watching my hands as they rested on my thighs, willing my fidgety
fingers to remain still. I was thinking of my conversation with Steph earlier that
morning.
***
A couple of dead grandparents, the former owners of the house to which we
escaped, had built a deck at the highest point of their roof, maybe fifty feet up
from the sunburned lawns. Accessible by a staircase that ran up through the
center of the house, it was a square, fifteen feet on each side, beneath a roof built
to protect from the sun rather than the rain. The old couple had probably taken
their grandkids up there in the late afternoons to share smiles and watch the sun
cast its red glow over water skiers trying to get in their last runs before dark.
But Grandma and Grandpa had turned white with the virus and slaughtered
their grandkids in the living room two floors below. Murphy and I put them both
down a few weeks before when we’d discovered the mansion and decided to
make it a safe house for our band of survivors.
Unable to sleep in the wee hours of the morning, I’d wandered around
through the dark house and eventually found my way up to the deck. Steph was
up there alone, taking her turn watching for ghostly Whites that might be
creeping toward us across the peninsula.
“You’re up early.”
“Yeah,” I said as I climbed the last of the creaky cedar steps to join her.
Without looking at me she said, “You were supposed to get a full night’s
sleep. That’s why you weren’t given a watch assignment tonight.”
Was she scolding me? “I think I passed out for a nap on the boat this
afternoon. It threw me off my sleep rhythm.”
“It’s still two hours before sunup.”
“And?”
“And maybe you should go down and try to get some sleep.”
“I’m tired of trying. You’re being motherly about this.” I smiled to let her
know that I wasn’t completely serious.
Steph glared at me before turning back to look across the stretch of dried-out
lawn between the river and the back of the house. “I’m responsible for keeping
all of us alive. And that requires discipline, Zed.”
“Yes, ma’am.” I sat on one of the empty chairs and took in the view. The
black river snaked off to the west. The sky flashed dimly with far away
lightning, but only scattered clouds rimmed in silver moonlight hung in the sky
above.
Steph changed her position to look up the road that led to the bridge at the
end of the peninsula.
The smell of rain blown in on the breeze earlier that day was gone. The dry
taste of dust and lingering smoke was back. To make conversation with a
seemingly impervious Steph, I asked anyway, “Did it ever rain?”
Steph shook her head and gently snorted as if to say, “Of course not.”
“Do you mind if I sit up here with you?”
“It seems like you’ve already decided. Is everyone else still asleep?”
“Yep.”
Steph strode over to the railing that gave her the best view of the front of the
house, and then without a word, walked over to me and laid her hand across my
forehead.
“What?” I reached up to push her hand away, but her stern expression told
me I’d better let her go about her business.
She pulled her hand back. “Last night, when I hugged you, I thought you felt
hot.”
“I get that a lot.” I pasted on a grin.
“I’m serious.”
I put a hand to my face, then to my forehead. “What? I feel fine.”
“You have a fever, Zed.”
“I know.” We both knew the virus left me with a permanently elevated
temperature.
“Have you had a chance to check your temperature since—?”
“Since?”
“When was the last time you checked it?”
“I’m fine.”
She was in Captain Leonard mode by then. “The last time I saw your
temperature was after you got injured at Sarah Mansfield’s house. I’m guessing
you haven’t touched a thermometer since?”
I shook my head.
“Do you think you should have?”
I shrugged, getting a little miffed. Sure, she was a nurse by training, but her
tone didn’t sit well with me.
“I think you’re hotter than you were.”
“Maybe it’s just that you’re used to the cool air out here tonight.”
“Cool? It’s got to be at least eighty-five.”
“That’s cooler than a hundred.”
“Nobody thinks eighty-five is cool, Zed.”
I shrugged and tried to look for anything interesting out in the darkness to
divert her attention.
“I have a thermometer in my bag downstairs. After my shift, we’re checking
you.” Steph looked back across the grass toward the mountain and examined the
near-vertical face of the white limestone cliff.
How would anybody be able to see the infected climbing down the jagged,
pale-colored rock? “We need some night vision goggles.”
“You can change the subject if you want, but I’m still taking your
temperature when we get back downstairs.”
“What’s the point?”
“We need to know.”
“Why do we need to know? We can’t do anything about it, can we?”
“That’s not the point, Zed.”
“Of course it is. If the virus is progressing, I don’t want to know. I don’t
want to dread the morning I wake up half brain-dead. I’d rather… I’d rather just
stick my head in the sand.”
Steph turned away from the cliff and came over. She looked down at me.
Her stern face had softened and, for the moment, she stopped being my boss and
was just green-eyed Steph, a girl with guarded emotions and a big heart.
“Please?” I said. “I don’t want to know.”