Randall tugged the cord of the chainsaw. It roared to life.
He raised the tool--now a glorious weapon--in front of him, absolutely loving the feeling.
The chainsaw sputtered and died.
Out of gas.
And then the teenaged dracula was upon him, mouth open wide. Randall screamed with rage and bashed the chainsaw into its face as hard as he could. Randall, who was lumberjack-sized, had a good eighteen inches and a hundred pounds on the little monster, and the impact was severe. Blood sprayed.
A second hit and the creature dropped to the floor.
Randall smashed the chainsaw into its head, over and over, as the dracula kept thrashing and trying to grab him. The chainsaw held together fine--Randall didn't buy cheap chainsaws--and after a good dozen or so blows the dracula stopped moving.
Randall wiped the gore from his face. He hoped the hospital security cameras had caught that.
There was still chaos everywhere, and people who needed help, but once again Randall had to focus. He stood back up, wincing, and forced himself to get moving again. Though there were probably much better options for bashing draculas to death than his chainsaw and it would just weigh him down, he couldn't bear to leave it behind.
Time to find Jenny.
Moorecook
BLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOODBLOOD
SOURCE!
He crouched, felt the new power coursing through his system, and then he was soaring through the lobby, everything slow and fast all at once, and he came down on the shoulders of a man behind the snack bar--the smell of his blood so pure and rich--and as the man screamed, he took his head between his claws and twisted and ripped until a geyser of glorious red erupted in two ropes and he drank from the larger of the two like a water fountain. Had tasted nothing better in his seventy-six years, not even the Macallan fifty-five, not the models he'd fucked back when he could still get it up. The taste of it he couldn't begin to explain, only how it made him feel, each drop running down his throat--sweet warm salty rust. Like he'd never breathed before until this moment and had finally taken his first hit of oxygen, knowing the more he drank the better...
FUCKFUCK FUCKFUCKFUCKFUCK
Already the blood flow was ebbing. He had to lick it off the floor now, where it was cooling and congealing, and that beautiful euphoric push had begun to pull away, leaving something black and terrible in its place.
A headache descended, like someone driving an ice pick through his frontal lobe.
Something stung his shoulder. He jumped up onto the snack bar, fire blooming down the corridor, streaking toward the doors to the ER, men screaming at him, the gunshots distant, like he heard them from underwater, and with some of the lights came a brief but violent sting, and he could smell blood, his blood and their blood, still muted under their clothes and skin but it was there, calling to him, and he was moving toward them before he realized what he was doing, the men retreating, yelling, more points of light opening and dying like fireflies.
He stopped.
These men would fight him.
He didn't want to fight.
He just wanted to drink, and there must be a hundred or more of these blood containers on the floors above him.
Sick. Drugged. Helpless.
He leapt off the snack counter and bounded through the lobby toward the elevators.
Jenny
RATHER than dwell on why this was happening--which wouldn't help things make any more sense--Jenny fell back on her training. After applying antiseptic, lidocaine cream, and a compress to the claw wound on her hip (which thankfully wasn't serious), she administered a cryoprecipitate IV to a softball player with a transradial amputation of the forearm, and put a Celox compression on the stump to control bleeding. Jenny repeated the procedure with his friend who was missing half his ass, and also gave him a shot of synthetic morphine because the guy was screaming so loud it made her ears ring. Once both patients were stabilized, she allowed herself a bit of pride at her efforts.
This was the reason she'd become a nurse. To help save lives.
Focusing on that, she turned her attention to the hallway, remembering how close the pediatric ward was. Jenny Bolton had no idea what Mortimer had become. But if he got to the children...
Screams, from behind her. She spun and stared in disbelief. The ER had become a war zone.
Somehow, Mortimer's affliction had spread, infecting others. Jenny counted three--no, four--of the fanged creatures, and a fifth in mid-transformation, spitting out teeth as longer ones grew in. Those still human tried to make it to the exit, but the EMT Jenny had ridden here with was blocking the doors, snapping and slashing at anyone who came close.
That a-hole Lanz was nowhere to be seen, but bending over one of the infected, smashing its head in with a chainsaw, was...
"Randall!"
"Jen?"
Her ex-husband's neck craned up at the sound of her voice, and he caught Jenny's eyes and smiled at her, big and stupid.
That's what Randall was, at his core. Big and stupid. But despite all he'd put her through, seeing him there, alert and sober amid the horror and the chaos, gave Jenny a burst of hope. More than anything, she wanted him to spirit them both out of here.
But they couldn't leave. Especially now. With more of these...things...in the hospital, someone had to protect the children.
Randall limped over to her, that familiar, lopsided grin on his face, as Dante's Inferno raged around them. She met him halfway, and when his huge, hairy arms closed around her in a hug, she endured it.
Hell, against her better instincts, she welcomed it.
"We've got ourselves a dracula outbreak," he said. "Let's get out of here."
Jenny pulled away. "I can't leave. There are kids in this hospital. Sick kids. They won't have a chance on their own."
Randall's brow furrowed, and he pursed his lips. "Okay. I'll take you to the truck, then I'll come back and--"
"No time. I have to go now."
"It's too dangerous, Jen. Let me do it."
"Do you even know where pediatrics is, Randall? Can you even spell pediatrics?"
Randall frowned. "That's low."
He was right. And Jenny wanted more than anything for Randall to come with her. But she couldn't ask that of him. She'd divorced him, kicked him out. Even if he had sobered up, she couldn't ask him to risk his neck in such a deadly situation.
During their courtship, their engagement, the early years of their marriage, Randall had been the sweetest man on Earth, a big, loyal puppy dog. Not the brightest bulb in the box--really, she could do the New York Times crossword while Randall couldn't even spell crossword--but that didn't matter. Randall was...Randall--insanely devoted, who always had her back. Here was a guy who was there for her.