Monday, December 3, 2012

Three Things - Round 3

Hypochondriac Zombie with OCD that works in a morgue - Twilight Series (books) - Staten Island, NY

            When it all started, people had fled Staten Island, climbing over each other to escape the quarantines being rolled in by the military. The country was in a state of panic and the people scattered in search of some sanctuary. Some stayed behind, to tough it out in their homes, remaining with loved ones or, like Milton, because they hated people.
            Milton Waters lived a quiet life. He woke each morning, showered, brushed his teeth, put on the clothes he had ironed the night before (when there had been power to iron) and walk down the 4 flights of stairs to the street. His office was two blocks away so he would simply walk the distance with his thermos in one hand and his bag slung over his right shoulder. After the diaspora from Staten Island he lived the same way. The walk to work was simply quieter and less crowded, much to his liking.
            Milton worked at the Essex County Morgue. His peers had seen fit to leave, already being surrounded by the dead, they were not keen on seeing people in similar stages of decay stalking the streets. The general fear had been that the bodies being kept would reanimate and consume them. This was not the case. The bodies in the morgue were quiet and kept to themselves. They mostly lay in their beds interred in their drawers while Milton read behind his desk. His drawers and desktop were littered with books and prescription bottles for any sort of ailment. The murky orange bottles were gathered around a diagnostic manual like revelers before a relic
            Working in the refrigerated and preserved environment had its benefits. The dead who wandered the streets saw Milton as one of their own, ignoring him as they shambled from place to place. He could also catch up on all of the culture and literature he had been deprived of when people had previously died and become work instead of managing themselves. Indeed he saw these new “people” as more responsible, they were also very clean despite the haggard state many assumed. He still didn’t dare to near them.
            The few living people who remained on the island had already collected into small militarized camps. They viewed Milton as an outsider, a strange aberration of humanity. Every time he wandered past a camp the members would marvel at his clean dressed and oblivious nature. They would remark that he must one day succumb and die.
            Milton began to have difficulty finding food. He searched through the grocers market for anything that had survived but viewed each possible meal with a disgusted skepticism. “How sick will I get if I eat this?” He would ask the food in question. If it silently responded anything other than a firm negative, it would be replaced on the shelf and mentally noted to have failed inspection.
            Books also became increasingly scarce. Other survivors saw them as a fuel source and began to stockpile them in their camps in preparation for the winter. This is how Milton began to read books that he would normally ignore. It is how 50 Shades of Grey and Twilight found their way onto his desk. He read them in protest. Protest of the survivors and their insistence on destroying culture and protest of things changing in this new world order.
            It was halfway through the third book of Twilight when Milton had enough. He flung the book across the room where it slapped loudly against the vinyl floor. The sound made him wince and he at once regretted it. Noting that he had little else to do, he fetched the book of the floor gingerly and brought it back to his desk where he proceeded to wipe down the covers. This was what drew that the first living corpse into his halls and ended Milton’s existence among the living.
            People continued to see Milton after he turned. His brain was hardwired into that routine. Each day that decaying body made its way down four flights of stairs and into that office where it sat until the end of the day. It would eat the bodies of those in his care, possibly preferring their preserved taste and always wiping his face when he finished.

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