Old alliances are broken. New alliances are formed.
Lines have been drawn. And it becomes nearly impossible not to cross them.
The Warden’s new plan has devastating effects. But it might not be foolproof. Will he have the chance to see it through? Can Jack Turk survive long enough to escape the walls of Warsaw Prison? Or will Muncie succeed in tearing everything apart, one bloody strip of flesh at a time?
Zombies are nearing the perimeter. And the legions of undead are growing inside the prison walls.
The surprises in this post-apocalyptic horror tale have readers on the edges of their seats.
Buy this book to continue the terrifying series today!
Caged 3 is the third novella in the Zombie Lockup series by Chuck Buda. It is approximately 25,000 words and contains adult language, scenes of horror and a cliffhanger ending. Reader discretion is heavily advised.
The inmates of Pod C & D has staged fights to try and over take the guards and get out of their cages. Unaware that it was Warden Gorgon who had leaked the info to the pods.As of yet Pod A & B has not planned an uprising. They were in for lesser offenses, unlike the harden criminals that reside in Pod C & D. Book three picks up where book two left off.We find out more about what the Warden of Warsaw prison has in mind. We find out the punishment that Claudia Franchine will be. The guard Muncie has a few ideas of his own on how he can survive.I am interested to see where Mr. Buda takes us with this series. Hope Melvin will be ok.He and Jack made a good team. We see more Zombies in this book and I suspect we will see more in the next installment.
Picking up the pace from the first two installments. In terms of continuation of the first 2 books, I think it really gave a good sense of what the prison looks like outside of CPod. I liked the development of DPod this book, especially since they only got a chapter or two in the previous installment. I think the story being told is right on the money with what the books before it laid out.
The "zombie" part of this series is really highlighted in this book and I have a feeling it will continue to do that in future installments.