David
was caught in the middle of the city when the zombie outbreak
started. His wife and daughters were at home, stranded on the roof as
zombies waited below. He would have to fight through hordes of
undead, merciless other survivors, and a series of death defying
stunts to get home. However, even if he makes it there, how can he be
sure they're safe?
Deadlocked
puts you into David's head as he struggles to get home. Then a final
confrontation occurs that could guarantee his family's survival, but
at what cost?
BUY
LINKS: (for a short time only - Deadlocked Book 1 is free on the following sites)
Excerpt:(From Chapter 1 of Deadlocked)
“What hospital are they at?” asked Jerry. He was supposed to be managing the floor, but he had no interest in telling people to get back to work on a day like this.
“A bus full of kids just showed up." Gloria clasped her hand over her mouth. “This is horrible.”
“Has anyone died?” asked Jerry.
“Not yet,” said Alan, one of the company’s accountants.
“How many kids are sick?” Jerry pushed his way past the others to get a better view of Barry's screen.
“They didn’t say. They’re taking the camera over to the bus now,” said Barry.
Everyone silenced and I could hear the reporter telling the viewers he was going to get on the bus. After a few moments of rustling, which I assumed was the reporter’s microphone rubbing against his coat, he asked, “What happened here? Are these kids okay?”
“Oh my God,” said Gloria. “How terrible. Look at them, the poor babies.”
Then the screaming started. Everyone in Barry’s cubicle jumped and caused the walls to shake as people pressed against them. Barry’s speakers crackled with the shrieks of children.
My daughters are three and five, so I was studied in the various screeches a child can make, and these were a mix of pain and terror. The pained screams weren’t the sort that came from a stubbed toe or skinned knee. These were a violent expulsion of every ounce of breath and energy the child could muster. I can still remember the sound that came from that speaker as if it were happening now. It was horrific.
I couldn’t ignore this event anymore. I got up and peered over the divider.
“What are they doing?” asked Gloria. “Why are they doing that?”
Barry turned off his monitor, but the sound continued to wail through his speakers. He scurried to turn them off and eventually had to rip them away from his desk. The cord whipped out from behind his computer tower. He held the speakers and stared up at me, his face drained of color and his eyes wide and unblinking.
“What happened?” I asked. “I didn’t see. What happened?”
Jerry had his hands on his head and sounded like he was going to hyperventilate as he stumbled through the crowd and fell back against the wall outside the cubicle. James and Marcia announced they were going home and Jerry just nodded his acceptance. Work was officially over.
“What happened?” I asked again as I went out into the hall.
Gloria came out of Barry’s cubicle and steadied herself against the threshold. “They were killing each other.”
“What?”
“The kids…” she couldn’t continue.“They didn’t just kill each other,” said Barry. “They were eating each other.”
AUTHOR
BIO:
A.R.Wise was born in Hammond, Indiana, just outside of Chicago. He's
spent time in several states throughout the years but now resides in
beautiful Colorado, near the Rocky Mountains. He is the proud father
of two adorable, beautiful girls that inspire him everyday, and is
married to an unreasonably understanding and loving wife. He has been
writing since he was a child, but the ebook revolution is what
finally convinced him to offer his work to the world.
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