Seanan McGuire (seanan_mcguire) wrote,
Seanan McGuire
seanan_mcguire

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T-minus 11 days to DEADLINE.

July 18th, 2014.

It began nowhere. It began everywhere. It began without warning; it began with all the warning in the world. It could have been prevented a thousand times over. There was nothing that anyone could have done.

It began on July 18th, 2014.

At 6:42 AM, EST, in a hotel in Columbus, Ohio, Susan Morris rolled over in her sleep and sighed. That was all; the starting bell of the apocalypse was a simple exhale by a sleeping woman unaware of the transformation going on inside her body. Marburg Amberlee and the Kellis cure fell dormant as their children, their beautiful, terrible children, swarmed through Susan's blood and into her organs, taking over every function and claiming every nerve. At 6:48 AM, Susan's body opened its eyes, and the virus looked out upon the world, and found that it was hungry. She would be found clawing at the door three hours later when the maids came to clean her room. The room did not get cleaned.

At 9:53 AM, CDT, in the city of Peoria, Illinois, a man named Michael Dowell was hit by a car while crossing the street at a busy intersection. Despite flying more than three yards through the air and hitting the ground with a bone-shattering degree of force, Michael climbed back to his feet almost immediately, to the great relief of bystanders and drivers alike. This relief turned quickly to bewilderment and terror as he lunged at the crowd, biting four people before he could be subdued. By nightfall, the first Peoria outbreak was well underway.

At 10:15 AM, PDT, in the town of Lodi, California, a woman named Debbie Goldman left her home and began jogging along her usual route, despite the already record-breaking heat and the recent warnings of her physician. Her explosive cardiac event struck at 11:03 AM. Death was almost instantaneous. Her collapse went unwitnessed, as did her subsequent revival. She staggered to her feet, no longer moving at anything resembling a jog. As she made her way along the road, she encountered a group of teenagers walking to the neighborhood AM/PM; three of the six were bitten in the struggle which followed. The Lodi outbreak began to spread shortly after two o'clock that afternoon.

At 11:31 AM, MDT, at the Colorado Cancer Research Center in Denver, Colorado, two of the patients from the Marburg Amberlee cancer trials went into spontaneous viral amplification as the live viral bodies already active in their systems were pushed into a form of slumber by the encroaching Kellis-Amberlee infection. The primary physician's administrative assistant, Janice Barton, was able to trigger the alarm before she was overtaken by the infected. The details of this outbreak remain almost entirely unknown, as the lab was successfully sealed and burned to the ground before the infection could spread. Ironically, Denver was the source point for one of the two viruses responsible for ending the world, and yet it was spared the worst ravages of the Rising until the second wave began on July 26th. Some will say that the tragedy which follows will come only because of that temporary reprieve; they weren't prepared. Those people will not be entirely wrong.

And so it went, over and over, all throughout North America. Some of the affected suffered nosebleeds before amplification began, signaling an elevated level of the Marburg Amberlee virus; others did not. Some of the affected would find themselves trapped in cars or hotel rooms, thwarted by stairs or doorknobs; others would not. The Rising had begun.

At 6:18 AM GMT on July 19th, in the city of London, England, a man waiting for the Central Line Tube to arrive and take him to work felt a warm wetness on his upper lip. He touched it lightly, and frowned at the blood covering his fingertips. He hadn't had a nosebleed since he was a boy. Then he shrugged, produced a tissue, and wiped the blood away. Nothing to be done.

And so it went, over and over, all throughout the world. The end was beginning at last.

***

Reports of unusually violent behavior are coming in from across the Midwest, leading some to speculate that the little brown bat, which has been known to migrate during warm weather, may have triggered a rabies epidemic of previously unseen scope...

When will you Rise?
Tags: deadline, mira grant, pandemic time, zombies
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I read this and thought "Yay! They finally start dying!"

...Don't know what that says about the way my brain works.
You are not alone. I've been waiting impatiently for the dead to walk.

phoenix_singing

6 years ago

That graphic is...mesmerizing...

childinthegrave

6 years ago

spitphyre

6 years ago

kshandra

6 years ago

Chilling, Seanan. Chilling. You win zombies.

A brown bat with rabies? Seriously?! No wonder the print media isn't as trusted anymore.

On a side note: this was creepier to read with "Shomer Yisrael" playing on YouTube (researching by listening while reading this; isn't multitasking great?).
On the plus side of the "rabies" claim, "don't get bitten by someone acting strangely" isn't the worst advice that you can get with zombie situations...

silvertwi

6 years ago

beccastareyes

6 years ago

wendyzski

6 years ago

paradisacorbasi

6 years ago

mel_redcap

6 years ago

silvertwi

6 years ago

Do they know what causes spontaneous amplification?
Not at this point, I'd imagine. After they get past the rising and society begins to reassert itself that I think some of the answers will start to come to the surface.

sheistheweather

6 years ago

paradisacorbasi

6 years ago

Zombies are love.
Ever since I read Feed, I wanted to know more about the events leading up to to the Rising and world that came in its wake. These vignettes are making me very happy and I hope we get more stories from the world of Newsflesh.

Yeah, it's love.
*hides*
The preliminaries have been dispensed with.

I love the line, "The room did not get cleaned." Awesome stuff!
"Come on up for the rising . . ." That song is forever linked now with Newsflesh!

semperfiona

May 20 2011, 16:10:02 UTC 6 years ago Edited:  May 20 2011, 16:10:49 UTC

You've probably already seen this, but if not...The CDC's suggestions for preparing for a zombie apocalypse
Oh crap. Oh crap. Oh crap.

However, I am totally looking forward to Saturday's now...
Hahaha, rabies epidemic. If only they knew.

It's never rabies.
I'll admit it, I laughed at that. :)
OMG I have chills! I haven't felt this way about a book since King's The Stand. *shakes fist*
Thank you yet again for another episode, on a not unrelated note @Paul_Cornell sent a link to http://www.renovationsf.org/hugo-packet.php so 50$ for a set of good ebooks and a chance to vote seems like a deal to me.
Well, yay. :)

paradisacorbasi

May 20 2011, 17:09:27 UTC 6 years ago Edited:  May 20 2011, 21:10:18 UTC

Amplification!

Reanimation!

Mastication!

Immolation!

Rationalization!

I am not sure what it says about me that I found this one a fun and exciting read.

Susan Morris shoulda bought the jam.


and once again, thank you.

And also, thank you for using London and its subway rather than New York and its subway. I know, based on what Zombie apocalypses are like that New York's subway caused as much if not more (except maybe for Tokyo and Beijing) horrific outbreaks, but it was heartening to see the "New York gets its ass kicked first by the global disaster" trope sidestepped.
But the bats are ok, right? People don't start killing them, right? :(
I'm pretty sure nobody has time to even think about killing bats.

paradisacorbasi

6 years ago

mel_redcap

6 years ago

I bought Feed yesterday and have already read it. I have to say...I normally Do Not Like horror in general and zombies in particular, but that's some good science fiction, there :)
Feed is like that. I could not put it down.
I've known this was coming all along of course, and yet that was still scary.

Eek!
In the process of shilling the fantastic-ness that is these 29 days of preparation for the newest addition to my Kindle library, I had to go research Marburg virus and found out that it's a real thing! Like, in the real world, there is Marburg virus and it is creepy and terrifying and reminded me that science is SCARY, yo. Messing around with things that make people hemorrhage internally. Only a research scientist would think that's a really cool idea.
Lodi! Nooooo!! *weeps*
How DARE they blame the poor little brown bats.
I don't want to go outside now.

Like, ever.
This entwined-dragon (?) icon is so very beautiful. What kind of art medium is it? Jewelry? Metalwork? Cloisonne? I'm curious (and, wistfully, envious).
Hee...my 24th birthday is going to be awesome.
*mixed arm-flapping and shivering*
YAY!
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