Anders (
rebelhealer) wrote in
boxofmisfits2020-03-25 11:53 am
Entry tags:
A Man and his Tyrant
A week after Anders took this job in Raccoon City, things went to hell. It had seemed like such a nice offer, him fresh out of medical school, ready to save lives, pay off that college tuition, and Raccoon City seemed like a nice place to start his career.
Then a man came in who claimed he'd been attacked by someone who bit him. Then more cases like that, of people attacking each other. Patients died overnight. Then the bodies in the morgue rose up and attacked the doctors. Then patients rose up before they could be taken to the morgue. Finally, the whole city broke out in pandemonium. The dead rising, swarming the city, people rushing to get out.
As he packed a small backpack full of food, and other supplies, Anders was suddenly very grateful that his apartment hadn't allowed pets, and he'd left Ser Pounce-a-lot with Delilah Howe in the next state over.
Once he was out of the apartment, he checked to make sure the coast was clear before heading out into the street. The bridge out of the city was a long ways away, especially on foot, and he could only hope that luck would be on his side as he walked at a brisk pace.

no subject
They pulled the last claw out and let the corpse drop, their arms falling limp at their sides, dizzy and slowly trying to think. No more immediate threats made that difficult. Violence focused them. Now their heart was beating faster, but there was nothing to do. They simply stood.
The tongue unwound from their arm and slithered to the ground with a wet smack.
no subject
"Come on, maybe we can find some place with a bathroom where you can wash up. I'm not sure I have enough surgical thread for those wounds, through."
Taking his pistol back out, Anders resumed walking, all while keeping his eye open for more monsters and zombies.
no subject
Protecting the doctor was proving to be more complicated than they'd anticipated. In some ways, more frustrating. This would not have happened if their instructions had left them on their own. But they did... appreciate the consideration about washing off the blood.
no subject
Spotting a fire hydrant, Anders walked over to it at a brisk pace. "If we can get this open, you can rinse yourself off. Don't suppose you've got a wrench handy?"
no subject
They started paying attention again when the doctor sped up, toward... they didn't know what it was. Something metal, and it could be opened. That was all they knew.
They stared at it for a moment. It looked solid. They weren't even sure where it opened up. The human couldn't do it. Obviously. He wanted them to do it, but they didn't know how. Their arms were still weak. They knelt down to touch it--made from something rigid. Brittle.
So they took a deep, slow breath to steady themselves, stood up, and raised a foot to kick it. The breath audibly left their lungs in a growl as they struck, the metal snapped, and... water. Everywhere.
no subject
Figuring that he might as well rinse off too, Anders stood under the spray just a little, not taking off the backpack. He held out his arms, rubbing them free of dirt and grime, then cupped water in his hands to wipe off his face.
no subject
The pressure was so immense, the spray falling back down made it seem like it had started to rain. They took a step back, confused, watching the water gush from the broken pipe. They hadn't known it could do that.
But it was washing away the blood and infected brain, which had been the intent. They slowly raised their arms from their sides to let the water rain down on them, their skin still visibly knitting itself back together through the holes in their coat. Just as slowly, they brought their gloved hands to their face, partly in imitation of the doctor.
Now they were clean, and very, very wet.
no subject
He looked around, seeing some zombies shuffling out. "After we escape." Pointing down the street, Anders made sure to put some distance between himself and the windows of a nearby building.
no subject
And they did not want to. Biting into one of them would not hurt them, but the infected were a far cry from the dense bricks of food they received from Umbrella. They doubted the infected would be as satisfying. But if the hunger grew more intense, they might be tempted.
Also, there was water trapped in their boots. They had yet to form an opinion on that, but they had the distinct impression it might grow to annoy them.
no subject
Ducking into a nearby gas station, there was just a single zombie behind the counter, one which Anders shot in the cheek.
no subject
And there was nothing here for them. There had been infected here, and their victims, but there were no corpses left. The only technically edible thing here was the doctor, and their mind recoiled from that idea as soon as it touched them.
They didn't understand why the doctor was stopping, but they fit through the door just in time for the scent of infected blood to spray from a new wound. And there were other smells, some almost familiar. This place had food.
But their compulsion to complete their task was too strong--they paced the aisles first, checking for infected, for humans, for anything that might be a threat. Nothing.
Once the urge was satisfied, their patience was thoroughly exhausted. The infected had eaten almost everything here that smelled like flesh, but it had ignored almost everything else. They snatched something up, not bothering to remove the colorful skin on it before they bit down.
They didn't know what it tasted like, but it was more intense than they had expected, despite the sterile, uninteresting skin.
no subject
Anders went over to the chips isle and tore open a bag of fritos, digging in by the handful. The sound of packages crinkling behind him made him turn around, eyebrows raising. So Mr. X did eat. Didn't even bother to take off the wrapper.
"Wow, you were hungry."
While he was at it, he helped himself to a candy bar, then grabbed a few more to stick in his bag. He scarfed down the entire bag of chips before returning to Mr. X, making his way back to the entrance, looking out the clear glass for zombies or monsters.
no subject
By the next one, they learned. Their gloved hands weren't dextrous enough to rip the skin off, so they tore it free with their teeth first. They swallowed the contents with barely a moment's pause, still wandering the aisles, trying to find something dense enough to feel like food they recognized. There were labels on all of these, words they could read--but not make any sense of. They tried things at random, subjecting themselves to a riot of clashing tastes before they finally settled on something that at had a hint of familiarity on their tongue. It was meat, but long-dead dry and covered in a flavor that had evidently hidden it from the infected.
The doctor seemed ready to leave. They put more bags of the stuff in their coat, returning to the human's side. Hopefully they had eaten enough.
no subject
Anders carefully poked his head out, doing a quick sweep with his gun. There were some zombies across the street, shambling along, but no monsters. Waving Mr. X along, Anders continued down main street.
"It shouldn't be much farther."
no subject
They ducked their head yet again to fit through the door, taking the doctor's gesture as permission to range on ahead and eliminate the threats. More skulls cracked, spines snapped, and snarling cut short. Each time they destroyed one, they were already turning to the next.
no subject
"Okay, new plan. There should be a subway entrance nearby, we can escape through the tunnels. If we're lucky, we may even be able to get one of the trains up and running."
no subject
Which the doctor wanted to move away from. They didn't understand. They remained there, staring at the bridge, unmoving. Should they force the doctor in that direction?
no subject
The first thought to mind was that it was a quarantine barricade, and that they wouldn't care that he wasn't infected. Worse, that they would see Mr. X and do something to him.
Looking up at Mr. X, Anders asked, "You're not with them are you?"
no subject
They heard the gunfire. That meant more risk, but not an unexpected one. People from the company were often armed, especially when they had to get close to the tyrants. They didn't understand why they bothered: The only time they had seen another lash out, the target was dead before they had the chance to fire. And the thought that the doctor might be in danger from company personnel simply did not occur to them.
But now were being asked a question that seemed to come from nowhere. They didn't answer. That wasn't what they did. Others talked. Answered questions. They did not do this. Humans made it seem simple, but they did not understand how to form thoughts into sound.
Gestures were barely an better, but they could sometimes use them. They pointed towards the barricade in the distance, trying to get the doctor to understand.
no subject
Looking at the barricade, Anders looks up, "Okay, tell you what, we'll get a little closer, but I'm going to hide behind you, in case they get trigger happy. Seeing as between the two of us, you can likely shrug off a bullet wound."
no subject
They did understand quarantine, or at least the two things it had meant for them. When they were put into quarantine, it meant sterilization, a gas that burned their lungs and eyes, and then confinement. When they were ordered to enforce quarantine, they killed everything.
If it was a company quarantine, that would be their role now. But they had received no such order. They were to protect the doctor. Could they break through the quarantine barricade? Possibly. It was the shortest route, and they knew there were no infected beyond that point. But they also knew the guns the soldiers would be carrying. Those bullets stung, bit into them, and could force them to a halt. If they failed to kill the soldiers fast enough, it would leave the doctor vulnerable.
But if this was a quarantine, the company would have locked down everything. All other exits would also be guarded.
They started forward, trying to plan how they would kill the soldiers.
no subject
"This is far enough," He hissed at Mr. X. He didn't hear any gunfire, but just to be sure, he took an apple he'd packed out of his bag and gently rolled it across the street.
no subject
"Halt!" A voice called out.
They stopped.
"Quarantine checkpoint, all civilians m--" A light shone directly at their face, their pupils closing to pinpricks.
"What the fuck?" Now the voices sounded much less sure of what to do. "What the fuck is that?" They didn't have clearance. Another reason to kill them, but they would be careful. "Is that a zombie?"
"Does it fucking look like one? Jesus Christ, dude, why'd you think that was a civilian, it's eight feet tall." "Don't you fucking--"
"That's enough," a more authoritative voice said, though they could hear how shaken it was as well. "We're calling this in. You!" The guns clacked quietly again as they squared up. "Stay where you are!"
They stayed.
"...Alright. If it moves, shoot it." The voice retreated, and they heard a door close. It was inside one of the vans now, where they couldn't hear it, leaving the others alone and jittery. "If he starts driving away--" "Fuck off with that shit and keep an eye on it." "I'm just saying, fuck him." "Fuck you too, man."
They heard an infected wheeze across the street. They couldn't tell if it had noticed the doctor, or where the human might be now. With no real objective holding them in place, they turned, and advanced on the infected. Their only task was to protect the doctor.
"Don't fucking m--" They felt an impact smack off the side of their head, their vision going dark for a moment. They stumbled and kept walking, hands balling into fists.
no subject
Hearing the snarl of the zombie, Anders drew his gun on instinct.
The gunfire made him flinch, before seeing his companion reel. "Mr. X!" Anders ran over to the creature.
no subject
The humans were shouting behind them--"Hold fire"--"Whos the fuck is that?"--but they weren't processing the words. The Doctor was also shouting. And the infected was still advancing. Now they had to choose, but everything was moving too fast. It felt wrong.
The infected let out a raspy cry as it staggered forward into a charge, and they responded with a deep, rumbling growl, grabbing it by the head and smashing it into the pavement hard enough to shatter the skull. They slammed it down again. Twice.
Then they stood, grabbing the doctor with their clean hand and pulling him behind them, keeping their body between the human and the quarantine checkpoint.
"Uh," said one of the soldiers. "I've officially lost the plot here, man."
"Hey!" one of the others called to the doctor. "Are you with this thing?"
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)