Sunday, May 10, 2009

Andre Renard. Quebec, Canada.

Andre Renard firmly believes that his “warfare” was probably the most hardest on them all. Try fighting underneath a city. That’s what he did. He, along with many other civilians and MP, were underneath Paris inside tunnels of the dead and the living dead. These tunnels were enormous and mostly unknown. There were many dead bodies along with skeletal corpses everywhere. When the civilians poured in, it became a chaotic living quarters.
Along with the endless tunnels and routes, there were also the zombies that fallowed in somehow. If you were attacked by a zombie, you could hear their cries for help and over the radio. Yes, radios were used, even underground somehow. If you needed help, people would race towards you, but it doesn’t always work. You had to assume where they were. You didn’t always know. Sometimes you’d get lost or end up finding them, and, most likely, dead or reanimated.
There were also floods and toxic chemicals in the air. Their equipment was heavy, old, and, sometimes, unnecessary. Their gas masks might be old now, not working up to the full potential because of the filter. Water was raising and people could be drowned by zombies too.
Sometimes the scuba divers came into help. I don’t know if that was such a smart idea, but it is what it is, you can’t change what already happened. They had a 1-in-20 chance of survival, the lowest branch of any army. Too many combatants and civilians were dying. It was a mess.

1 comment:

Emmanuel Rodriguez said...

That is intense. Many people wouldn't have guts to go in to a mission with 1/20 survival chance. The people doing these missions under the city most definietly had the toughest job