Vaccination

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Authors: Phillip Tomasso
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climbing up the sloped embankment. Street lights lit the road. Anything off the road was shrouded in darkness. Mostly.
    I saw it. Them. Faces.
    “Allison, run! Run, Allison!”

 
     
     
    Chapter Eleven
     
     
    The keys were in the ignition. It was no SUV, but the Chrysler at least looked like it had balls. Big tires and a solid frame. It was better than walking. Except, it didn’t start. Key turned; something spun and churned, but failed to connect. I need that something to kick over and the engine to rev into life.
    “They’re getting closer.” Allison sat next to me, on her knees. She stared out windows—not just one, all of them—looking for zombies. Since ditching the SUV at the start of the expressway ramp, we’d be en stuck, working to find a vehicle ahead of the disabled and abandoned cars that clogged the road leading toward Lyell Avenue.
    “Think it’s flooded,” I said. I wanted to punch the dash. It wouldn’t do a thing to help, except make me feel better.
    “How long until it’s not flooded.”
    Time was always the best way to fix such a problem. “A few more seconds before I try again.”
    “I don’t think we’ve got that. They’re right outside the car.” Allison held her tire iron in two hands. Not like a ball player up to bat. More like a child clutching a blankie after a nightmare.
    “How many you see?” My dad had showed me a way to beat a flooded engine. Thing was, if it didn’t work, then I’d be guaranteed to have flooded it more.
    “Three. No,” she said, “four. I see four. All coming up behind the car.”
    “That it? Just four?” Four was plenty. Too many. But four was better than ten, or even five.
    “It’s all I see. So far. Just them, just four.”
    “I’m going to try something. If the car doesn’t start, you slide over. You get ready to try it again,” I said.
    “And where will you be?”
    “I’m going to get rid of those things. I don’t know how this works. If they smell us, or each other. Know what I mean? All I’ve got is what I’ve seen in movies. How fucked up is that?” The call I’d taken at work, from the scientist, he’d said the things were hungry, and could only be killed for good if the head—the brain—was destroyed. I mean, that was as zombie as you get. Walking Dead shit right here.
    “You’re not getting out of the car,” she said.
    “We don’t have time to argue.”
    “Try it,” she said , “just do it.”
    Cars were all fuel injection. This thing shouldn’t happen. Might not even be flooded. Might just be broken. I pushed the accelerator to the floor. All the way. I didn’t pump the pedal. Just held it all the way down. I turned the key.
    Realized I was holding my breath when nothing happened, and I exhaled. “Shit.”
    I reached for the door handle. I didn’t think it was flooded. Didn’t think it was going to start. Ever. Effectively, Allison and I were trapped.
    “Where are you going?”
    “This car isn’t going to work.” I gripped my tire iron. “Wait here.”
    I looked out the back windshield. Four fucking zombies. One. Two. Three. Four.
    When I opened the door, I climbed out quickly, feet on loose gravel, my balance shot to shit, my right foot slid, leg extended and I went down. I didn’t scream when I banged my elbow on the pavement, but I winced.
    Allison screamed.
    If surprise had been in our favor, maybe I’d of had the upper hand. On my ass outside the car with Allison calling out asking if I’m okay, no, nah. The element of surprise was wasted. Gone.
    One of the things stumbled around toward me. It seemed slow moving. Not fast. I was trying to learn, to figure out what kind of enemy we were up against. It was like anything else. Some were fast, others slow. I’d bet some smart and some dumb as all get out. The only thing in common that I’d noticed across the board, was that they were ugly, horrendously ugly. 
    I took a swipe with the iron at the thing’s leg. The thunk against bone felt

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