Closing Time

 

Eric Kenner was beginning to nod when the tires crunched on the gravelly side of the interstate.  He jumped awake and swerved back into his place, thankful that no one was around to see him.  Or hit him.  He had tried turning on the air conditioning to full blast, and that had helped for a little while.  Not long enough, though; Jenner was fading, and he knew it.  In his twenty-three years of driving big rigs, he had only fallen asleep on the road once – but of course, that was all it had taken, as they say.  His souvenirs from that little adventure came in the form of enough metal reinforcement (pins in the legs, pins in the spinal column, and of course, the ever popular four inch plate in the head) to get him special treatment at airports.  Since then, it had been his policy to quit driving as soon as he was even remotely tired; to pull into some hotel and just crash, even if he might only be an hour or two from his destination.

Tonight was different because his destination had nothing to do with his job.  He had a feeling that if he didn’t reach Myra by tonight, she would be gone forever.  If he stopped now, if he showed just one more sign of anger – even an unintentional one – it was probably curtains for them.  She had already started talking about moving out of their house and getting an apartment.  Eric had little doubt that if Myra did that, she wouldn’t be moving in alone.  Not for the first time, he wondered whether or not he really had been better off not knowing about the man she was cheating with.  After all, before that, he had been happy, and had assumed that she was, too. 

Now he knew the truth, and he was miserable.

The first drops of rain spattering the windshield jerked him out of his thoughts of Myra, back to thoughts of the road.  He didn’t mind driving in the rain most of the time, but then most of the time he was in his Peterbilt rig, and not in this dinky Honda Civic.  Plus, he knew that after a little while, rain falling on the windshield would likely become a soothing lullaby, which was the very last thing he needed right now.

He glanced down at the cell phone lying in the passenger seat like the world’s smallest child getting to sit up front.  He could call her.  If he told her that he was tired and needed to pull off to get some rest, she’d understand.  After all, she’d been there, holding his hand in the ICU and crying her eyes out as she stared at the damaged body of her husband.  She knew that if he said he needed sleep, he meant it.  Every time.

But tonight, maybe she knew something else, Eric thought.  Maybe she also knew that she didn’t love him anymore.

So, no phone call.  Tonight he would make it home, and he would talk to her face to face.  If the stars aligned for him, if he could be very convincing, and most of all, if there still burned something inside her for him, he thought they might pull through.

 

*          *          *

 

He was fading again when he saw the smeared streak of halogen lights up ahead.  He snapped awake, mentally gauging the distance to them so he’d be sure to catch the right exit.  What he felt now was more than tired.  It was an ache, the kind of soulless sorrow that comes from wanting to sleep and being unable to.  It seemed he could feel it in his bones, in his stomach, behind the eyes he so desperately wanted to close. 

It was a gas station; he could see it more clearly now through the rain.  One of those middle-of-nowhere all-nighter joints, he supposed, and shuddered.  If there was one job more lonely than his own, surely it was being a clerk in one of these places.  He turned his blinker on, too soon, but it didn’t matter.  It was almost two in the morning, and he hadn’t seen another car in half an hour.  Raindrops fell, scattered, and were swept away by the windshield wipers as he pulled off the interstate, guiding his car mostly by the lights ahead, as if he were a mariner lost in a storm on a choppy sea, and the halogens ahead were the salvific lighthouse.

He certainly felt lost tonight.

The parking lot was rough; there were large cracks in the macadam which held sizable populations of weeds, these pushing up through as if to reclaim Earth for the flora.  Caught among them were bits of trash – part of a coffee cup, a cinnamon bun wrapper, a broken beer bottle – souvenirs, no doubt, from this hallowed establishment, carried to a temporary resting place by wind and circumstance.

Eric pulled in, shut the car off, and just sat there for a long moment, hoping the rain would let up long enough for him to get out and go in without getting soaked.  It didn’t happen.  He reached over into the passenger seat and picked up the cell phone, flipped it open.  He had two bars, which wasn’t much, but it would be enough should he decide to call Myra.  He could do it; he wasn’t sure how close the nearest hotel might be, but it had to be closer than home.

Besides, this whole thing was probably a waste of time.  In all likelihood, it was too late to save the marriage anyway; best for him to get over it and begin the process of moving on. 

He put the cell phone back in the seat and opened his door.  He would at least go inside and look around for something to wake him up, just to be able to say he tried.  Beyond that, he could ask the lonely clerk where the nearest hotel might be – where the nearest town might be, for that matter; he wasn’t really sure there was much out here at all. 

He was soaked the moment he stepped out of the car, and as soon as he shut the door he ran up to the awning, passing through the heavy sheet of drain water and gasping at the cold.  He almost ran head first into the payphone, and wouldn’t that have been hilarious, he thought.  He took a moment to shake himself off, wringing his hands, running them through his hair, wringing them again.  Now his hair stood up in dripping spikes, and the skin of his palms was shriveled with moisture.  It occurred to him that he was wide awake now, and that he could probably go another twenty or thirty miles in this condition. 

But no; he was here, so he might as well get something to drink.  Not coffee – Eric hated coffee – but something caffeinated.  Maybe a Coke.

He walked to the front door, which was glass crisscrossed with black iron bars.  “Charming,” he muttered, and stepped in.

 

*          *          *

 

The music hit him first, the smell second.  Of the two, the music was more recognizable – he thought it was George Gershwin’s “Rhapsody in Blue”.  The smell, though familiar, eluded him.  It conjured strange scenes from his youth, existing as a cloudy ectoplasm enveloping the stage during certain scenes of the mostly-forgotten play of childhood.  It was inane, alien, yet powerfully close.  He both wanted to inhale deeply to explore its singular bouquet, and at the same time vomit it from his nose and thrust himself back into the night, where the rain-washed air would smell fresh and vivid and above all things right.

This smell was not right.  It was wrong.

He stepped across the threshold, and above him a small grouping of jingle bells shivered into action, hailing his arrival by cutting harshly across Gershwin’s roving piano solo.  They died out quickly, and the sound of the rain was slowly enveloped by the sound of the door whooshing shut behind him.  Another tinkling of bells, and he was fully inside the store.

Something else felt wrong about the place immediately.  Not only did it not smell right, but he seemed to be entirely alone.  No one stood behind the counter; there were no patrons in the aisles.  He hadn’t seen any other cars in the parking lot, so he supposed that made sense, but…

“I’ll be right there,” a raspy voice said, and Eric jumped.  He looked in the direction the voice had come from, and saw an open door with the word “OFFICE” printed on it.  On this door were a multiplicity of signs, including such witticisms as “THE BEATINGS WILL CONTINUE UNTIL MORALE IMPROVES”, and “PROBLEM CUSTOMERS WILL BE TAKEN OUT BACK AND SHOT”.  Oddly enough, these signs cheered Eric a little.  They seemed to take a little bit of the creepy out of it, in some way he couldn’t quite put a finger on.

He turned toward the first aisle, and was startled to see a man-sized hourglass.  Most of its sand – which was brown rather than the usual white – was in the bottom glass.  On the top glass was a sign written by hand: TIME UNTIL CLOSE.  This one seemed a bit less cheery than the ones on the office door.  Eric shuffled past it toward the rest of the aisle and began walking down it, his eyes catching on things here and there.  Car equipment on the first aisle: everything you could possibly need from jumper cables to air fresheners.  There were sunglasses and phone chargers, phone cards and sun visors, ice scrapers and ice chests.  It all seemed perfectly natural; if you were coming into this gas station, you were likely on some kind of long trip, and who in the world liked to take a long car trip sans those special accoutrements one could acquire most conveniently at a convenience store?

Eric smiled, moving on.  He found that he had been wrong about the rain waking him up fully – he felt almost as tired now as he had in the car.  Maybe a Coke wasn’t going to do the job.  As a general rule, he tried to stay away from caffeine pills and energy drinks (he secretly suspected that cancer or something equally vile resided within such products, and that to use them even sparingly was to take one’s life in hand), but maybe tonight was the time for that rare exception.

The end of the first aisle ended up being the porn section.  This was the part of any convenience store which he – and, he assumed, most self-respecting people – tried to skirt around, not because he had no interest in such things, but because it was uncouth.  Now, of course, it was just him and the as-yet absentee clerk.  The urge to look was primal, had been ever since he was a youth.  Around about the time that that smell reminds you of, wouldn’t you say, a voice in his head intoned.  He took a faint sniff of the air, dismissed it, and looked at the porn rack, checking over his shoulder first to make sure that he wasn’t being watched.  There was no sign of the clerk yet.

What he saw surprised him; he had been expecting seedy stuff – this wasn’t a bookstore, after all – but he hadn’t been prepared for this.  In place of the Playboy and Penthouse brand of magazine there existed a rack of sadomasochist literature.  Magazines devoted to bondage and torture, leather and chains and spiked heels abounding.  Women with barely-blurred breasts caught in vise clamps; men holding paddles with what looked like blood on them.  There were faux vampire magazines; Goth dominatrix women with pointed teeth leering out from studded leather corsets.  There were even a couple of magazines in what looked like Russian Cyrillic; one showed a man hanging himself, one hand on the rope, the other in front of him and – but for the carefully-placed shrink wrap one could be certain – probably on his penis.  The other magazine featured three women, naked and not blurred out at all, sitting in a circle.  Scattered among them were fake body parts.  One of the women held a severed human arm up to her face, and was chewing on it.  Eric raised an eyebrow; evidently, cannibalism had entered the world of porn since the last time he’d checked.

He moved on down the aisle, coming to the cooler, and by way of the cooler, to the portion of the store devoted to alcohol.  Beer bottles and cans stood before him behind the glass walls of the cooler doors like rows of infantrymen, waiting only for orders.  It’d be called the Charge of the Coors Light Brigade, he thought, smiling a little to himself.

God, he was tired.  He brought his hands up to his eyes, rubbed them, stared at the beer. 

Here was an idea: he could buy a twelve pack, grab some smokes (because it just wouldn’t be proper drinking without a pack of smokes), find the nearest hotel room, and drink himself to sleep watching some shitty old movie.  Simple, beautiful, uncomplicated.  He had always suspected that he’d make a pretty good alcoholic if he really applied himself to the task; here was the perfect opportunity to find out.

There was a metallic clicking sound behind him, and Eric turned to see that the clerk had finally come out, and was locking the front door.

“Sir,” he said, walking slowly back up the aisle, wondering if this place would even have something as urbane as an energy drink for sale.  “Sir, I’m still in here.  Sorry, I didn’t know you were about to close.”

The clerk turned slowly to face him, and Eric paused, mid-stride.  The man was tall and lanky, sporting a button-up shirt that seemed out of place here.  Eric noticed almost immediately that his left hand – and perhaps much of the arm that it connected to; it was impossible to tell with the shirtsleeve – was actually a prosthetic.  The clerk’s pants, a faded but well-creased pair of black dress slacks, seemed to billow around him, as though his legs were thin as broomsticks.  His face was gaunt and pale, almost a gray color.  Eric only stopped staring two or three seconds after he realized he was staring and instead focused his gaze on the door.

“Ah, there’s always one or two,” the clerk said in that gravelly voice, his grin revealing two rows of broken and mostly rotted teeth, which Eric didn’t see because he was looking at the door.

“Yeah, well, sorry man,” he stammered.  “I, uh…I was just looking for a quick energy drink or something.  Do you mind?”  He risked a glance at the clerk, seeing not agitation on the man’s face, but a kind of satisfaction.  The clerk adjusted a pair of thick-rimmed glasses, and smiled, this time with his mouth closed.

“Not at all, sir.  I’ll just leave this other door unlocked for you.”  He waved his prosthetic hand in the general direction of the OUT door, and made his way around the counter.

“Where, uh…where do you keep – ”

“Third aisle, all the way back to the cooler,” the clerk said, and Eric noticed that the man was walking with a limp.  Whatever had happened to this guy, it had fucked him up pretty badly.  He went back the way he had come, this time passing the strange porn and the beer without looking at them.  Sure enough, he found a host of energy drinks, named for everything from hip-hop singers to illicit drugs.  Normally, he would have looked each one over – probably to see if the ingredients lists contained the word “cancer” – but not tonight.  The store was already closed and besides, he had an uneasy feeling about this place.  He grabbed the first thing his hand could find and shut the door. 

The music changed as he was walking up, Gershwin giving way to some pop tune he didn’t recognize.  So the guy has an eclectic taste in music, he thought, trying to fight the uneasiness and failing.  So sue him.

“Ah, yes, the ‘Dumpsta Diva 202’, an excellent choice,” rasped the clerk as Eric set the large pink can on the counter.  Eric hadn’t even glanced at the name, but he did now.

“That’s a weird name for an energy drink,” he said.

“I believe it’s named for the rap singer.”

“Wonders never cease,” Eric said.

“Pardon me if I’m being forward,” the clerk said, “but I noticed you were looking at our fine selection of…adult material.  Anything in particular catch your eye?”  He leaned across the counter, and Eric suddenly realized that the strange smell was coming from him.  He still couldn’t put a finger on what it was, but the memories it conjured up grew perceptibly sharper; he was in his early teens, and he was in school doing something.  But what?

“Sir?” the clerk said, and Eric came back to the present. 

“Hmm?  Uh…no.  No, I didn’t find anything interesting in the por… in the adult section.  Thanks.”

“Pity,” the clerk said, reaching up to adjust his glasses.  When he did so, Eric saw a horrible thing.  The clerk’s nose actually moved with the glasses.  It was a slight thing, but in it, Eric caught a glimpse of the dead black chasm that lay behind the man’s prosthetic sniffer.  What the hell was wrong with this guy?

“Pity?” Eric repeated dumbly. 

“Yes,” the clerk said, finishing with the glasses adjustment.  “I sometimes enjoy conversing with…shall we say, kindred spirits.”

“Sorry to disappoint,” Eric said, and looked down at his energy drink.  He had no memory of any popular singer who went by the moniker “Dumpsta Diva”.  Knowing the current crop of famous people was Myra’s bailiwick, not his.  But it seemed odd to him; surely even among the hip-hop community, there was such a thing as a modicum of class, wasn’t there?

“If you’re interested in hearing it, I’ve got one of the Dumpsta Diva albums in my office.  She is…off the chain, as I believe they call it.”

“No, thanks,” Eric said, feeling genuine alarm beginning to creep in on him.  “I’ll just take the drink.”  He reached his right hand around and fished out his wallet.  With his left he went for his cell phone – just in case.  It wasn’t there, of course; he had left it in the passenger seat. 

No worries, he thought.  I’ll just pay for this and be out of here.

That was when he discovered that all he had was a fifty in his wallet.  He’d neglected to take his credit card with him on this trip, since it had initially only looked like it was going to take him a few hours.  Now, he realized that even if he wanted to get a room somewhere to crash for the night, he probably wouldn’t be able to.  That was okay; as long as he could get out of here, he thought he could make it the rest of the way home.  In fact, he realized, the small tendrils of fear that were encroaching on his mind had acted as the perfect wake-up – he felt fully alert now. 

“Ah,” the clerk said, staring down at the bill in Eric’s hand.  “Not only a late-comer, but a man with a large bill.”

“Yeah, I’m sorry,” Eric said, not feeling sorry at all, but not wanting to piss this strange apparition of a man off.  “It’s all I’ve got on me.”

“And you just assumed that I would be able to accept such a large bill at this late time of night,” the clerk said.  “Isn’t that a little frightfully presumptuous?”

Eric looked up to see the clerk smiling again, this time with his broken teeth showing for all the world to see.  It was in that moment that he finally realized what the smell was, and where he had smelled it before. 

It was formaldehyde.  The scene flashed before his mental eye: ninth grade, the science lab, and a young Eric Jenner standing with his teammates over the partially-dissected remains of a pig fetus.  They had been kept in formaldehyde.

“You know what,” Eric said, backing away from the counter and slipping the fifty back into his wallet, “I’m sorry.  I think I’ll just go.”  His heart was pounding now, the not-quite-irrational fear swelling into terror of the clerk.  He backed away several more steps, his eyes not leaving the ruined man, and he bumped into something, nearly knocking it over.  He turned, only barely stifling a scream.  It was the huge hourglass; all the sand now rested in the bottom half, and the TIME UNTIL CLOSE sign taped to it flapped in the slight breeze caused by the disturbance. 

“I suppose I’ll just put this back for you, as well,” the clerk said.

“Yeah, sorry…I…I’ve just gotta go,” Eric said, and bolted for the door.

It didn’t open.  Eric ran face-first into it, mashing his nose against the glass, and it did not open.  The panic exploded now and became a hot white heat that ate rationality and shat adrenaline.

“What the fuck?!” he shouted, turning back to the counter.  But the clerk was no longer there.  Eric turned further, toward a steadily building wheezing sound, and saw the madman limping around the counter’s far edge.  It took him a moment to realize that the wheezing was actually laughter; it was punctuated by little coughs, one of which produced a viscous black fluid which flowed from the corner of the clerk’s mouth, falling onto and staining his shirt.

“I’m terribly sorry,” the clerk said, his grin on full power now.  “I seem to have forgotten to leave that door unlocked.”

“Don’t come near me, man!” Eric said, jumping back.  This time, he did knock over the hourglass.  It fell seemingly in slow motion, crashing to the floor and shattering into thousands of pieces.  Eric, who had stumbled in the process of knocking it over, now leaped backward over what was left, as if it might form some sort of protective barrier.  It didn’t, but he picked up a shard of glass, wielding it like a knife.  “Don’t you even come near me, asshole!  I don’t know what the hell all of this is, but you need to just fucking cut it out!”

“Sir,” the clerk said, reaching for his glasses, “this is a family establishment.  I’m afraid I can’t tolerate foul language, let alone the brandishing of a weapon.”  He removed the glasses and, consequently, the prosthetic nose, exposing two caves of blackened, desiccated flesh.  “Even a weapon as ineffectual as that.”

“What are you?” Eric moaned.  He could feel his grip on the glass shard weakening; could feel his knees wanting to buckle, his blood turning icy in his veins. 

“A zombie, of course,” the clerk answered simply.  “But you didn’t want to know that, did you?”  He stepped forward slowly, grinning again; the black stuff he’d coughed up coated the bottom row of jagged teeth.  “See, now you’re even more afraid than you were before, because you’re thinking that I’m either crazy – which is bad, or that I’m telling the truth – which I assure you is much, much worse.”

“Get away from me!” Eric shouted, renewing his grip on the glass shard so tightly that he could feel it cutting his hand; could feel the blood beginning to flow down his palm and onto his wrist.  “Let me out of here or…or I’m going to call the police!”

“Oh, but you can’t call the police, of course, or you already would have.  Did you think I wouldn’t notice when your hand went to your pocket?  You were looking for your cell phone, but of course it wasn’t there.  I’m betting it’s out there,” he gestured with his prosthetic arm toward the door behind him, “in the car.  Sound plausible?”

“Look, what do you want?” Eric said.

“To eat your brains, what else?” the clerk said.  “Honestly, I’m surprised you didn’t get that one right off.”

“My…my brains?” Eric said.  “My fucking brains!”  Now he was angry.  “What is this shit?  Am I being ‘Punk’d’ or something?”  He glanced around, hoping to see the orchestrators of this particular prank coming out of the proverbial woodwork, knowing that he wasn’t going to. 

“I’m afraid I don’t know what that means,” the clerk said, and began to lurch forward again.  “Now, we can do this the hard way, or we can do it the really hard way.  In either case, my friend, please know that I’m grateful for the nourishment which you are about to provide for me.”

“What are you talking about, you crazy bastard!?” Eric said, continuing to backup a step for every forward one the clerk took, as though they were locked in some malign form of dance – the hunter and the hunted, performing the two-step from hell.  “Look, man.  You’re not thinking right, okay?  If you’ll just back off and let me use the phone, I can get you some help.  I know a doctor who specializes in these sorts of things.”  He didn’t; Eric Jenner couldn’t even imagine a doctor who treated this kind of head case, and he sure as hell didn’t know one.


“I’m not thinking right,” the zombie clerk repeated, the rasp in his voice somehow conveying a perfect sense of contempt.  “My God, you can’t even speak properly to save your life.  What has this old world come to?”  He took another step forward, this one more of a lunge, and gave a harsh, barking laugh when Eric yipped and nearly fell over getting away from him. 

“Stop doing that!  Let’s fucking talk about this, man!”  Eric reached out a hand to steady himself, realizing only a second or two later that he was leaning on the porn rack.  He pulled his hand back, wiping it on his shirt. 

“I find it difficult to converse with someone whose elocution consists mostly of sentences like, ‘Let’s fucking talk about this, man’.  When you’ve been around as long as I have, when you’ve absorbed as much of the knowledge of etymology – which in the pantheon of things known occupies such a tall pedestal – it becomes rather boring to talk to the uneducated.”

“How long have you been around?” Eric said.  He was stalling, and the monster in front of him seemed to know it; he stopped advancing for a moment, raising his real hand in an accommodating gesture. 

“All right, all right,” the zombie clerk said.  “I’ve got all night, and I’d hate to deprive you of all chances to think of a possible means of escape.  Shall I tell you my life story?”

“Yes, please,” Eric said.  The zombie stared at him for a long moment, the grotesque grin hanging off his face like a necrotic dream – the vision poisoned into a nightmare. 

 

*          *          *

 

“My name,” he began, “is – or was – Joseph Bellows.  I was born in the year eighteen ninety-seven, in Scranton, Ohio.  When I was twenty years old, I was killed in the trenches in France.  A bombshell went off a little too close to my left arm, tearing it off, and I bled to death before the corpsman could even get to me.  Ten days later, I woke up back in Scranton, inside a coffin in the First Baptist Church, to the tune of ‘Amazing Grace’ being played on the organ.  It was, of course, my funeral.  I never knew how it happened, but…hey!”

Eric bolted.

 

*          *          *

 

He ran, past the porn rack, past the beer, the oddly named energy drinks.  He ran wildly, seeing rows of soda to his left, aisles of chips and candy bars to his right.  As he neared the ice machine at the back corner of the store, he looked to his left and saw a door marked: EMPLOYEES ONLY.  Without hesitation, he slammed into it, and then realized that he had to turn the doorknob first.  Behind him, he could hear the creature coming for him, its pace increased, its breath wheezing not laughter now, but genuine exertion. 

I’ve got to get out of here, his mind yammered at him, over and over.  I’ve got to get out of here!  He burst through the employee door, praying that he would find an exit door right behind it.  No such luck; if this place had an exit door, it wasn’t in the logical place at the back.  Instead, he saw what appeared to be a dry storage area, littered with massive beer carton forts and empty boxes.  Cobwebs hung from the ceiling, and Eric suspected it had been decades since anyone besides the creature now chasing him had even been back here.  Or, at least, been back here and made it out alive.

To his left was the door to the cooler.  It was old, with a pull-bar like that of an old refrigerator.  If he could get in there and somehow lock the door…

He was in like a flash.  From outside in the store area, he could hear the thing bellowing at him.  He pulled the door closed, looking desperately for some kind of linchpin.  For the first time that evening, fate smiled down on him.  Not only was there a metal pin hanging down on a frail old chain, but there was a hole to stick it in.  Lightning-quick, he stuck it in, then backed away.  The terror did not leave him then, but it slowed a pace. 

It was at least twenty-five degrees colder in here, and Eric was suddenly reminded that he was still drenched from the rain.  He hadn’t realized he was shaking until now; the combination of fear and cold danced a furious clogging jig across his skin, and his teeth began chattering. 

He heard the employee door opening, and then a banging on the cooler door.

“Let me in!” the zombie shouted, but he was laughing again, the wheezing quality of his breath an eerie mumbled drone in Eric’s ears.  “I promise it’ll be quick if you let me in now.  I can smell your brains, though, and they’re driving me crazy.  Be warned; if you wait too long, I won’t be able to control myself.”     

“How about you control yourself now and leave me the fuck alone!” Eric yelled. 

No response.  All he could hear now were the two ambient sounds of the cooler: that of the compressors pumping in the cold air, and that of his teeth chattering.  Then he heard the employee door again, and through the glass between the rows of drinks, he could see the clerk’s figure lumbering out into the store proper.  He used his free hand to move aside some of the beer, then peered out.  The clerk was nowhere to be seen.  All that lay before him were the dirty floors and lonely subdivisions of various unneeded products; a cobweb spun of man, its design fiscally predatory. 

All the lights went out.

Eric started and sucked in breath, suddenly enveloped in utter blackness.  He dropped the shard of glass, heard it tinkle on the concrete floor.  He squatted, breathing heavily now, and felt for the thing, his eyes moving vainly back and forth, back and forth, back and forth.

Finally they caught something.  It was faint, but it was there.  A dim glow presented itself, lighting around two sides of a black angle.  At first it didn’t compute, and then he realized that whatever light it was, there was a box between it and him.  He reached forward, moved the beer aside, and peered out.  It was the streetlamp outside.  It should have been comforting, seeing that.  Instead, it made the panic within him grow.  If the only light coming in through the store window was the streetlamp, then the outside fluorescent lights were off, too.  This meant that, for all intents and purposes, the store was going to be unnoticeable to the outside world. 

In that instant, the glass cooler door Eric was facing swung open, the magnetic lining giving off a pinched smooching sound, the hinge screaming a small scream.  Then a hand – a horrible, cold and bony hand – reached through and grabbed him by the arm.  Eric screamed, but it did no good.  The clerk’s strength was amazing.  He yanked Eric forward, and Eric’s face slammed into the metal rack above it.  He felt warm blood trickling down his forehead, and for a moment he was disoriented.  But then the creature was yanking him again, dragging him out of the cooler, knocking boxes of canned and bottled beer all over the place.

Frantically, he felt around the floor with his other hand, but it was too late for the glass shard.  His torso was already partially wedged between the racks.  It was a tight fit, but as more and more beer fell out of the way, there became more room for him to fit through. 

He flexed and unflexed his hand in the monster’s grip, hoping against hope that it would slip through; no such luck. 

“Come on out, now, human,” the creature rasped, and Eric could now tell a difference in its speech.  The words were slurred, as if the clerk had been drinking for half the evening, and they had an odd hollow echoing quality, as if they were words not so much spoken as merely produced.  “I want your brains!  I need your brains!”

“Get away from me!” Eric sobbed, unable to fight the pull of the monster as he was dragged the rest of the way through the cooler.  He spilled out onto the floor, landing atop and around a heap of broken bottles and burst cans.  Everywhere now there was the sound of fizzing, and the related but separate smells of alcohol and formaldehyde.  A split second later, the monster was on top of him, its bony knee pinning Eric to the floor.  Eric shrieked in pain as the knee drove into his kidney.  Then the thing grabbed him by the hair and yanked his head up hard.   

“BRAINS!” it croaked loudly, then sank its teeth into the hair and scalp.

Eric screamed as the zombie bit in.  He felt the jagged teeth tearing skin from his head, and then grinding against something underneath.  Suddenly, it was the zombie’s turn to utter a howl.  The teeth went away, and the knee at his back slackened.  Eric turned his aching head to look back and up at the monster.  It was clutching both hands – the real and the prosthetic – to its mouth, through which came a horrid, rusty screeching now.  He saw several of the thing’s teeth fall out between the fingers, rolling down its shirt and leaving a trail of blackish ooze.

The plate in his head.  The zombie had bitten into the steel plate. 

With a sudden burst of energy borne of pure survival instinct, Eric twisted his body, hurling the ailing zombie to the side.  He got up on all fours, the throbbing pain in his scalp threatening to unman him.  But he had to get out of here.  He had to get to a doctor.  Had to get to the police.  Had to get home to Myra, even if she was cheating on him.  He glanced around at the broken beer bottles and found a suitable one.  Then he stood astride the zombie and held the jagged end of the bottle-neck up to its face.

“Keys,” he said.  “Now!”

Wordlessly, its eyes wide and mysteriously dry over its empty socket of a nose, the zombie removed a hand long enough to reach down and grab its keys.  It handed them to him, then returned the hand to its mouth.

Eric dealt it a solid kick in the chest, and was both surprised and horrified when his foot went through its sternum.  He had to pull it out, which took some effort. 

“Fuck you, man,” he said.  “You fucking deserved it!”

Then he turned and staggered away, toward the front of the store.

Toward the locked door.

 

*          *          *

 

The rain felt surprisingly wonderful on his wounded scalp.  Despite his terror, he paused a moment just outside the protection of the store’s awning to let it soak him down from head to foot.  He found, for that brief moment, that horror was overcome by revulsion, and he had to fight the urge to retch on the way to his car. 

Behind him, through the glass door of the store, he heard the monster again, its rasping scream seeming to grow closer, as if it had gotten up to walk off the mortal wound Eric had dealt it.  That broke his paralysis.  He dropped the thing’s keys in the parking lot, and reached for his own as he ran to his car.

Once inside, he fumbled with the keys in the dark for a long, terrifying moment – the one streetlamp did not provide much light out here, either – before remembering the dome light.  Within five seconds, he was melting rubber getting back onto the interstate.

 

*          *          *

 

After only fifteen or twenty minutes of driving, he began to feel consciousness threatening to get away from him again.  This time, however, he thought that it was probably from the blood loss, considering that he probably had enough adrenaline running through his system now to light a football field. 

He was tired.  He wanted to pull over and just sleep sitting up.  Only for a little while, and then he could continue on his way home, where Myra would be waiting for him.  Myra, he thought.  How am I ever going to convince her of this one?  Of course, Myra was low on the totem pole in terms of people he needed to see right now.  He had to get to a doctor.  Had to get to the police.

He remembered the cell phone, and looked over to find it in its spot, just where he’d left it.  He wondered now if the thing back there would have attacked him if he’d managed to pull it out and call someone.  That was an unanswerable question, and he suspected that there would be a lot of those in this case.  He reached for the cell phone, felt his fingers close around it, then let it go.

Myra was what mattered.  He didn’t know why, exactly, but somehow the events of this evening had honed his focus to a sharp edge that he wouldn’t have thought possible before. 

Myra.

Myra.

Myra’s…

Myra’s brains…

 

END.

By J.M. Jennings

J.M. Jennings was born in 1983 in Wichita, Kansas. He is the author of four novels and dozens of short stories, and has also written a daily column for a website and occasional sketch comedy. He has lived all over the Midwest, and currently resides with his wife and two sons in Kansas.

 

https://www.amazon.com/J.M.-Jennings/e/B004XW7Z2C

Locked In

I suppose you could call what I have: ‘Locked-In syndrome.’

I’d ask a doctor, a neurosurgeon perhaps, if I could, which I can’t, and if they weren’t in such short supply.

It’s always the way with epidemics. Medical staff get hit hardest. First responders as well: the police and the paramedics, and then the army, and finally anyone stupid enough to volunteer.

Ahh… that’d be me. Won’t be doing that again.

Still. I keep looking for men in white lab coats, keep wandering the echoing hospital, hoping against hope that I can take control of my errant body for just long enough to impart my message.

That’s me. Not looking to be saved. I figure it’s probably too late for that. The rot, it would appear, has set in, but I’m still looking to save. I always was that sort of a girl. Three blood donations a year, Queen of charity cup-cake bakes, and, of course, stepping forward in a crisis when I’d have been much better off hiding in a cellar with all the other end-of-world preppers.

But I keep trying to do my best, keep trying to do the right thing.

Problem is, this damned body of mine won’t cooperate.

Back when the epidemic started, when it was all new and weird and worrying in a “that can’t possibly happen to me, can it?” way, the doctors thought it was a virus that attacked the brain, eating away at the higher processes until just the cerebellum was left, barely enough grey matter to coordinate motion and to seek food.

Any food. Anything the afflicted could still manage to open, or catch. So not cans, or bottles, or anything that needs cooking – they were too stupid and clumsy for that. Not dogs, or cats, or birds either – they were too slow for that. Which only really left other human beings.

No wonder the Government issued advice to “shoot the zombies in the head!” when quarantine failed, when they ran out of medical staff to investigate the outbreak further.

But they were wrong. Are wrong. I’m proof of that, if I could but tell them, if I could pass on my message. And I assume all the rest of the shambling horde are the same: active minds locked in the bodies of monsters.

You can hardly blame the authorities. It’s hard to strap an ECG to someone who is trying to eat you. Or is that for the heart? The C – that’s cardio, isn’t it? What’s the name for the thing they strap to your head? Measures brainwave activity?

If you could get one of those onto my skull, it’d light up like a Christmas tree. Because the higher functions aren’t dead, they’re… disconnected. Something is interfering with the way the mind controls the body, the link between that fabulously wrinkled surface and the more primitive and ancient reptilian brain stem.

It’s not a complete disconnection I guess, not quite. There are still signs of intelligence, of humanity. When I lurch towards a victim, that’s me, or the mind bit of me anyway, trying to give that unfortunate every chance to escape, trying to stop myself, the feral, body part of me, doing what it insists upon doing.

It doesn’t work very well though. I can’t control the beastly body, it just makes my movements… jerky. Well, more jerky. Slow zombie, rather than fast zombie.

But it’s the best I can do. I can’t even close my eyes to not see the grisly end when it comes. And I get to hear it, and smell it, and ultimately, taste it, as well.

Sometimes – and I hate, truly hate to admit this – I don’t even bother to resist until it’s too late. Because I know that lesser part of me is only doing what it must to survive. And I know if it doesn’t eat, then my brain, the only bit that’s still truly me, doesn’t get fed either.

Which, for a former vegetarian…

If I could, I’d tell that body of mine how to get food without chasing and hunting and tearing apart other humans. Just like I used to, I’d tell it how to operate a can opener, or what to do with a frozen pizza.

But, I can’t. I’m locked in.

So, as my idiot body tumbles a ripped off head in its gore-slicked hands, staring into its pus filled eyes as if trying to work out how to get to the good bits, what my Sheffield University educated brain is doing is imagining piping chocolate frosting onto cupcakes Paul Hollywood would be proud off, the rest of the Great British Bake Off team bursting into sudden applause, and-

-Did my hands just move together, as if to join in that applause?

And did my numbed tongue try to whisper a Mary Berry ‘Well done’?

I do believe… yes! I’m as elated as if I’d been voted Star Baker, as if all those hours of cooking and decorating had finally been rewarded.

Maybe that’s the key. Maybe it isn’t my upper brain moving those hands, animating those lips, maybe it’s my muscle memory?

Either way, those hissed words, mangled though they were, that movement of hand towards hand, a moment of ignoring that raised skull, these are almost imperceptible reassertions of my mind’s control over my body and they make me want to redouble my efforts to communicate, to pass on this one vital bit of information to someone who will understand, who can do something with the knowledge. Knowledge that might, just might, swing things back in mankind’s favour.

Assuming there’s anyone left to listen.

And as if in answer to my prayers, there’s a clatter from the East Wing, followed by a muffled curse.

The afflicted might cause a clatter, but I’m pretty sure I’ve never heard one curse.

By now, the unlit corridors of the hospital are familiar to me. I don’t even have to check the map as I lurch past reception. I’ve stood before it for senseless hours before now. I think my zombie self likes all the bright, primary colours. Well, hospital beige can get pretty depressing, I suppose.

The sound came from the Neurology department. There are none of the afflicted in there, I know, and I have to-date been unable to enter myself. Double doors, swinging outwards are, apparently, totally zombie proof.

I’m still not entirely sure if the thing that is lurching down the corridor is my zombie body, drawn by sounds that might indicate a walking larder has strayed into the area, in which case I’m probably not going to be the only one to answer the summons, or if my brain is influencing the actions. I look down at my twisted ankle, at the white shard sticking out the side of my oh-so-sensible flat shoes. It’s a good thing I can’t feel the pain. That one sense, thankfully, doesn’t make it across the neurological divide. But the noise, the constant grating, the lurid colours as the infection moves up the limb, the sickly sweet smell… well, that’s another matter.

The double doors are now propped open by a fire extinguisher, which is either incredibly stupid, or incredibly smart. My body doesn’t stop to work out which and I begin to suspect what little control I have is really rather pitiful. I try to go back to my Bake-Off moment. I have to concentrate, I have to THINK!

There’s a shaft of light in the gloom: a torch, and I almost trip over a loaded trolley. My heart – if that was under my control – would have skipped a beat to see what it was loaded with. A couple of laptops, banks of test tubes, wired equipment that looks like something out of a Sci-Fi movie. This is obviously not your run of the mill scavenger after food and basic meds. This person has purpose, learning-

-And a gun.

A really rather large gun.

I struggle to lift my hands, try to show that I mean no harm, as I lurch towards him, as the cannon in his hand shakes. I suppose I should feel more scared, but this- this is the one, I can feel it, this is the man who can solve the puzzle and maybe cure the illness, or at least stop its spread. What else would he be doing here, collecting scientific equipment?

All he needs is a sign, all he needs is to know that inside the shambling, blood splattered, maggot infested form approaching him is a keen, alive, intelligent brain that maybe someone like him could work out how to reconnect.

I lurch closer, summon all my strength and willpower to drag my finger upwards until it taps the side of my skull. I draw ragged breath and, with herculean effort, I gasp my one word message:

“Braainnnssss…”

END.

by Liam Hogan

Liam Hogan is an Oxford Physics graduate and award-winning London based writer. His short story “Ana”, appears in Best of British Science Fiction 2016 (NewCon Press) and his twisted fantasy collection, Happy Ending NOT Guaranteed, is published by Arachne Press. Find out more at http://happyendingnotguaranteed.blogspot.co.uk/, or tweet @LiamJHogan

 

ZOMBITROPOLIS

Lady Judith Jane Geronimo glided up the staircase, ignoring the claustrophobic press of the metal around her and the gallop of her pulse.  Eyes half-closed, she made a game of her worries, as she always did, part of method acting.  She imagined the announcer’s baritone, Voicing Over the soap opera’s opening teaser.

“Today, the role of Constance Carrington is being played by J. J. Geronimo.”

Of course, the soaps were a thing of the past, a dead medium that had sadly taped its final episode in the city of New York well before the current crisis of this new world’s daytime drama.

The announcer in her head added, “Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses.  Your hungry—”

“Shut up,” Lady Judith said out loud.

The man moving up the staircase’s tightening throat ahead of her answered, “I didn’t say anything,” over his shoulder.

“I wasn’t talking to you, my Prince,” she said before drawing in a deep breath.  The soap announcer’s voice crackled out, partially driven to silence by a lapse in continuity—that bit about the hungry wasn’t part of the Emma Lazarus poem inscribed on the bronze plaque stories below their present location.  Either way, she had no intention of becoming part of anyone’s dinner plans, yesterday, today, or tomorrow.

Joel Flanders moved into position beside one of the spotters—Lath, a former military associate of the Prince.  Lady Judith still hadn’t learned whether or not the Prince and Lath had actually served time together before the world got cancelled like all of the New York soaps, or if they and the other men and women serving under her authority naturally built that level of trust with one another, like a game of pick-up hoops or softball that instantly bonds the players.  They were serving together now, post-Cancellation; that was what mattered, Lady Judith acknowledged in silence.

“What do we have?” the Prince asked, his voice gruff, direct.

“There’s a body out there, coming in from the direction of Manhattan,” Lath said.  “Eleven o’clock.”

The Prince raised his binoculars.  His muscular arm flexed, and the length of tattoo in tribute to his former Marine unit poked out of the short sleeve of his black T-shirt, the image magnificent.  Lady Judith did her best to ignore the rush of arousal that pulsed through her in counterpoint to her building anxiety as one more crisis was set to play out.  She stole a desperate breath.  Joel’s sweat, fresh and piney thanks to the fast hike up the Colossus’s inner staircase, ignited in her senses, further attempting to distract her.  Lady Judith’s gaze briefly wandered, taking in the Prince’s dark cowlicks, the prickle of five o’clock scruff on his chin, cheeks, and throat at just after eight on a sunny September morning, that amazing male body.  The parts of her that were still, technically, of the masculine gender tingled, as did those transformed to female before the Big Cancellation nullified her chance to change genders fully.

“Dead?” Judith asked.

The Prince shook his head.  “Worse, J.  After-dead.”

An icy chill rippled through Lady Judith’s insides, cooling both halves of the transgendered actress who’d once aspired to do soaps, but had gone only as far as a club act long blocks from Broadway before one massive cast purge and a global falling curtain had led to the biggest gig of her career.  “You know what to do,” she said.

“I’m on it,” the Prince said, and thumbed his radio.  “Starship One, you have authority.  Repeat, Starship One…”

######

The body, what was left of it, turned over on a whitecap.  Hissing, it rolled its eyes toward the distant shore of Liberty Island.  A hum built in the air, a sound from another time.  The body’s hunger surged and it tipped its rheumy gaze toward what its primitive brain translated as sustenance.

One of the six patrol gunboats in their fleet pulled free of its orbit around Liberty Island and streaked across the harbor’s gray water.  A single thunderclap erupted, the gunman’s aim perfect.  The head of the after-dead came apart from the nose on up, fully dead once more, the threat ended.

######

There were days that she swore she could hear the howls of the millions of after-dead in Manhattan, and the millions more in Jersey City, carrying across the water.  Other sounds like sirens, explosions, and the fires that had taken down several landmarks directly following the Cancellation had gone silent, but the chorus of after-dead voices haunted her days as well as her nights, an undercurrent from an unwanted audience vibrating on the wind.  Up this high in the crown of the Stature of Liberty, the dark melody again stung at her ears.

“Do you hear that?” she asked the Prince.

“Hear what?”

Lady Judith blinked.  “I thought…never mind.”

Joel placed a hand on her arm, squeezed firmly, just enough to verge on painful.  Those hands certainly were capable of it.  Instead, they grounded her to the tangible, to a small corner of the world where hearts still beat and lungs breathed air and several hundred living souls prevailed across some forty-three acres between two islands.

######

“We can’t risk them getting so close, J,” he said, her V.P. as it were, her handsome Prince.  “If our food source gets contaminated—”

“I know,” Lady Judith said.  She didn’t voice that she was sick of fish, no matter how many ways the cooks baked, fried, or tried to disguise it under fresh herbs.

Joel drew in a deep breath and then just as deeply let it sail.  “I’m going to recommend we suspend the search and rescue part of your plan.”

Lady Judith forced her gaze away from the panorama visible through the viewing gaps in the coronal crown’s spokes to Joel’s somber expression.

“It’s been weeks.”

Lady Judith nodded.  “Fifty-one days as of today since we rescued anyone alive.  I know.  I’ve counted.”

In a lower voice, Joel added, “We should conserve our resources for defense and gathering supplies.”

Lady Judith’s mind attempted to wander.  “Next spring,” the announcer spoke only to her, “we’ll farm Governor’s Island, too.  After disposing of any after-deads.  Probably infested with artistic types over there.  Perhaps you’ll know one or more of them.”

She willed the inner monologue to hush.  Her Prince was right.  He always was.

“It’s your call.  I trust your judgment.”

Joel nodded and pocketed his shades while addressing the spotters.  “Let’s be sure that swimmer was traveling alone.”

On his way past her, the Prince patted her ass, unnoticed by all save Judith.  A small but powerful act, his touch vanquished the madness brewing within her skull.  Mostly.

######

Going mad.

Lady Judith had worried she would lose her mind and degenerate and give in and collapse before the first winter snow fell, and, surely, there would be winter white in New York. This was a year for storms.  Big ones.  Real shit-kickers.  There had been plenty of lesser, quieter storms raging, too—like the one Lady Judith battled daily, sure that it, like the Cancellation, was going to overwhelm her world and, worse, be her undoing.

Getting onto the right dose of the right medication with her hormones out of whack had been trying enough.  The psych prescription that worked had been expensive even with insurance—there hadn’t been a generic option.  You couldn’t just waltz into any corner pharmacy in the process of being looted—or worse—and walk out with a lifetime supply.

She’d let it go.  Mind over matter.  If Lady Judith heard voices, well…it was just lines of script being run through in her head, she decided.  She took comfort in knowing that most of the 700-plus residents packed onto Liberty and Ellis Islands had gone a little mad as well, given what they had survived, given the cancellation of civilization and the reality of reruns delivered by after-death.  The dead woke up hungry.  A shit storm, indeed.

Mercifully, she had met her Prince, Joel.  Joel was, for the most part, all the medication she needed to stay focused, to stay sane.

She knocked back a glass of water and two aspirin from her own private supply.  A luxury, true, but one she agreed would benefit her in terms of doing her job.  If she was in the best shape possible, the islands would be as well.

Lady Judith fixed her lipstick—another luxury, but a necessary one—and glided out of her makeshift command center housed within the walls of the former Fort Wood at the pedestal beneath the statue.  It was time to play her role, act in the daily performance of reassuring her audience that all would be okay.  She hoped it was a good day and a great performance.

“Break a leg,” she whispered on her way out to tour the islands.

######

Their small fishing fleet bobbed on the whitecaps, what seemed a thousand miles away.  A pair of the former Homeland Security gunboats watched over the fishermen—the nets had, twice to date, brought up the bloated, reaching corpses of after-dead in their haul.

Judith and Joel strolled down to the pier.  She grabbed a handful of coins from the pink plastic beach bucket hanging on the nearest view scope and aimed the lens toward Manhattan.  As expected, the city’s streets crawled with herds of after-dead; millions, she imagined, undulating in search of live food.  Despite the warmth spilling down from a cloudless sky the color of comfortable denim, Lady Judith shivered.

The chill tumbled, drawing her back again to that day on the ferry.

######

The ferry.

They’d packed her in, along with a few hundred other refugees.  Out of the city.  To Connecticut.  Only Connecticut, like New Jersey, had closed its borders and the updates crackling across the Harbor Patrol cop’s radio said that any attempt to cross the Long Island Sound would be met with appropriate measures.  Blasted out of the water, in other words.

And so they waited, and the air grew so dense and heavy Judith couldn’t breathe.  Scared old ladies.  Kids.  A troop of young males with pants belted halfway down their butts and showing an acre of underwear.  Among them, a six-foot-tall black drag queen dressed tastefully in red leather trench and high heels, her lips looking sharp in her trademark shade of pomegranate, her favorite boots running up to her thighs.

She caught one of the street dudes staring and said, “Put your peepers back in your head—and keep those eyes peeled for anything out there that looks like a slimy network executive!”

“Say what?”

“Reeks of low tide, hungry for human flesh, fool!”

The old lady on the bench beside her began to sob.  Lady Judith wanted to, had wept plenty, in fact, since the Cancellation was first announced in Asia and began sweeping outward in vast concentric circles, making TV channels and whole countries go dark.  She didn’t give in, however; Lady Judith had kept her head level dating back to a time long before the current pestilence.  She’d project her tears onto her fellow cast through this tense scene, let others weep for her, only…

“Don’t worry, Ma’am,” she said, placing a manicured hand onto the woman’s shoulder.  “I bet we’ll be underway in no time.”

The old woman’s sad blue eyes met Lady Judith’s.  “They wouldn’t let me bring Mindy.”

“Mindy?”

“She’s still out there on the pier.  What’s going to happen to her?”

Mindy, Lady Judith saw, was not alone on that length of grubby dock.  Stacked a dozen deep were cat carriers and several birdcages.  A big mutt with floppy ears was tied to a post.  Lady Judith’s eyes widened.

“You,” she snapped at her admirer.  “And your homeboys.  Follow me.”

She pushed through the bodies standing about, stuck in a ferry with no safe destination charted.  A dozen steps later, she realized that none of the young Saggers had followed.

“Hey,” she snapped and clapped her hands together.  The burst of thunder silenced every conversation, even stemmed tears.  “You deaf as well as rude?  I said come on.”

The homeboys followed her out of the passenger section and onto the deck, where they fell under the sites of a dozen drawn weapons.

“Return to your seats,” shouted some giant macho-asshole in full riot gear and helmet.

Lady Judith folded her arms.  “What kind of red tape administrative bullshit is this?  No, not until you let us collect the rest of our peeps.”  She tipped her tweezed chin at the pets doomed to remain on the pier.

“Your peeps aren’t allowed on board, now get your asses back in there!”

Judith narrowed her eyes and shifted her neck from side to side.  “We’re not leaving without Mindy and the rest of the meow-meows and woof-woofs and tweet-tweets, tough guy.”

The Asshole retrained his rifle, a lethal-looking dealer of death.  Lady Judith’s resolve threatened to crumble; it was aimed at her chest.  In a disconnected manner, she heard the homeboys gasp.  One of the armed soldiers standing on the gantry swore.

“Sarge,” the soldier said.

Lady Judith wanted to look, the other man’s deep voice that alluring.  So, too, was his image, looming large at the corner of her eye.  But she dared not blink.

“We’re taking the old ladies’ kitty cats,” she growled.

“The only thing you’re taking, freak, is an early exit.”

The certainty that he was going to kill her rose cold in the grayness of that ugly morning.  The world had been cancelled; the after-death of syndication rose louder behind them, somewhere just beyond the pier.  Gunshots and howls and sirens rose sharply in the breathless moment that would determine whether or not the star of a drag cabaret lived or died.

“Lath,” the other soldier barked, this time louder.  “Lower your weapon!”

The Asshole didn’t, not until the man with the voice pressed the muzzle of his drawn Glock against her would-be killer’s temple.

“Flanders, what the fuck-?”

“Do it,” he said, not to the asshole sergeant but to Lady Judith.  “Collect your pets.  But make it fast.  We’re all about to get seriously fucked, according to the chatter.”

Lady Judith forced her eyes out of their rigor and blinked.  She glanced to the left, to him.  The man in uniform—Harbor Patrol, she saw—was, hands down, the handsomest she’d ever laid eyes upon.  Tall, with dark hair, classic good looks, a day or so worth of stubble, eyes as green as emeralds.  Heavenly distraction.

She woke from the trance and ignored her racing heart before it could distract her further.  “Come on, boys.”

This time, the homeboys hot-footed behind her without needing to be prodded.  They hurried onto the pier, driven to action by the after-death dirge moving closer and the sad mewls and scared chirps and a lone mutt’s whimpers.  A tabby with a patch of caramel color over one eye poked her face at the carrier’s door.

“You must be Mindy,” Lady Judith said.

She grabbed the pet carrier and another, cursing when one of her nails chipped.  Her new friends made fast work of collecting the other pets.  Lady Judith marched back up to the ferry, her heels tattooing a sharp staccato on the gangway.  “Thanks, my Prince,” she said to the handsome soldier.  “Now what?”

No one answered.  Lady Judith waited, shook her head, resumed her course back into the cramped passenger section, where cheers and applause broke out.

Lady Judith set down the cat carriers, then raised both hands, calling for silence.  “Listen up, people.  We have to boogie.  Connecticut don’t want us, nor does Jersey.  But I ain’t no Jersey Girl, never was, and I’ve only been through Connecticut on my way home here.  I’m a native New Yorker.”

More cheers.  The last of the pets arrived, including the mutt, its leash held in her Prince’s free hand.  “We can’t stay here.  Those things just powered past the blockade.”

Lady Judith Jane Geronimo straightened.  She was no longer part of the supporting cast.  No under-five lines.  No backup player.  Show time.

“Prince, tell your men to stow their weapons and hustle their butts aboard, then order the pilot and crew to take us out.  We’re going.”

“Going where?”

“The only place in New York we can.  The last place that’s safe.”

“And just who put you in charge?” another voice chimed in, the Asshole’s.

“She did,” Lady Judith said, and aimed her finger with its chipped nail in the direction of the harbor.

Untimed minutes later, the woman’s colossal head gazed down, welcoming them to the island.

“This is still America, and there are still rules, still liberty,” Lady Judith said to the Asshole.  “Try to remember that.”

######

She ended her trip to the past and faced Joel.  “What did you say?”

The Prince absently adjusted his crotch.  “A shark.  The Dorian Lord just called it in.  A great white, according to her skipper.”

A colony of seals had taken up residence on Governor’s Island where, in the spring, they planned to plant and expand their food supply.  “I’m not surprised.”

At Hotel Ellis—the former Immigration Museum—she fielded complaints, the usual like lack of space and privacy, and one unexpected.

“This place is haunted,” a young Latina named Vera said.  “I swear I saw a ghost.”

######

He lay beside her, one bare leg and big foot hanging out of the blanket.  The gentle sough of the Prince’s breaths post-coitus steadied Lady Judith’s pulse.  She inhaled.  Joel’s scent, male and raw, and hers, exotic from her favorite brand of perfume, blended together, becoming something bewitching.  Energy crackled through her blood.  Smiling, she set a hand on her Prince’s hairy outer thigh.

“What?” he asked, flashing a sleepy grin.

“The dumbest thought.  If the Big Show hadn’t been cancelled, we never would have had this chance to star together in the sequel and attend the after-party.”

The Prince snorted a laugh, even that sound attractive on him.  “You mean that if the world hadn’t gone to Hell, we never would have met.”

“That’s what I said.”

“More or less, Lady J.”

Their eyes connected in the flickering candlelight.  Lady Judith fell into the gravitational pull of Joel’s emerald gemstone gaze.  “The world could be in worse hands.”

“You’re a fine leading lady, J—the finest.”

The Prince took her free hand in his and kissed the palm.  Then he repositioned her fingers from his leg to another destination on his body higher up, and they again made something like love.

And the madness that pursued her, a different but no less dangerous enemy than the things wandering the streets of the dead city, retreated another step, for now.

######

There had been half a dozen infected after-deads on the island, but in the rain of that long ago morning, they hadn’t seen them from the dock.  Mad with hunger, two came strolling out of the mist, alerted to the sound of voices.  The pop and clatter of bullets masked the approach of the others as Lady Judith, the Prince, the Asshole, and two of the military men swept the Statue of Liberty’s pedestal.

“We’ll need to burn those bodies,” the Prince said.

Four other after-deads spilled down from the pedestal.  One slammed onto the Asshole, sending him sprawling across the grass, which had gone wild and weedy over the preceding weeks.  Another landed directly behind the Prince.  Terror surged through Lady Judith’s veins, icy and paralyzing.  But she willed it to the periphery and, in one fluid motion, she launched a kick into the dead man’s gut, driving him into Joel’s gun site.  Wasting no time, she retrieved the Asshole’s fallen rifle and pumped off a single shot.  The head of the Asshole’s attacker came apart.  More gunfire erupted.  Thunder echoed across the island.

“Thanks,” the Asshole said.

The Prince exhaled loudly, his emerald eyes narrowed, intense, but also seeing her fully.  “Where’d you learn moves like that?”

“I took a citizen’s police academy class for a role on a soap opera,” she said.  “I didn’t get it.  They cancelled the soap, and then they cancelled the world.”

“It’s a new world now,” the Prince said.  “A new show.  And it looks like you’ve done plenty of training to lead it.  Now, let’s do this by the book.  No more ugly surprises.”

Joel and the men fanned out.  When it had been confirmed safe, 311 men, women, children, cats, canaries, and one big brown mutt walked off the ferry and onto the soil of their new home.

######

The ratings had dropped.  There were rumors of new writers coming in—shake ups in the creative staff were never a good sign, because in order to put their stamp, their egos on a series, new writers normally began by getting rid of established characters and bringing in new ones.  Comings and goings.  Especially, during sweeps weeks.  A wedding leads to a murder, a funeral, an investigation, a courtroom drama.

The soaps were gone, though.  They’d followed the radio drama, the Western, the detective shows, and the hour-long family variety genres to the grave.  All that remained was Reality TV, a mindless, violent programming schedule of ugliness populated by D-listers.  No, Z-listers.  After-deads.  TV was a dead medium now, like the radio, the Eight-track tape player, the cassette, the record player, the VCR.

Lady Judith jolted awake, sure there was something malevolent in the room with them.  It stood in the dark corner beyond her Prince’s side of the bed, lurking against a section of wall lit by September moonlight; a thing with teeth, claws, and eyes that glowed as red as the night fires they often saw burning far across the water when something exploded and buildings caught fire.

It was coming for her.

“No,” Lady Judith gasped.  She closed her eyes, channeled mind to overcome matter, listened to the voices.

“Today in the role of Leader of the Living World, it’s Constance Carrington,” the announcer cut in.  “Constance Carrington in the role of Lady Judith Jane Geronimo, in the role once played by Jerrel Claxton, a poor girl born in a boy’s body right here in the Big Apple!”

Lady Judith pinched her eyes.  A pair of thick tears emerged, too clotted to fall on their own.  She instead wiped them away.

“Lady Jerrel, in the role of Constance Claxton.  Only what she did with the Handsome Prince of the Islands in today’s episode was anything but ladylike…”

She choked down a heavy swallow, tasting the proof of sex with Prince Joel.  Aspirin would help her headache, but only those elusive psych meds were strong enough to sufficiently vanquish the demons—silver bullets, mustard seeds, and cruciform all contained within one pretty pale tablet.

Lady Judith swore and shook her head.  The horror standing in the room evaporated, slinking back into the shadows and moonlight that had created it.

######

“I’m coming with you,” Lady Judith said.

The Prince dug in his soles.  She was past him by several feet before she realized he’d stopped advancing.  Judith did an about-face.

“I am.”

Fixing her with a stare that was as angry as it was attractive, the Prince bridged half the distance.  “We can handle it.”

“I know you can.”

“Then stay here, where you’re needed, J.  We can’t risk losing you.  If not for you…”

He didn’t finish the sentence, and didn’t need to.  Every day, she and the Prince toured Liberty and Ellis Islands, and saw the scope of the operation that had sprung up in so short a time: a fishing fleet, livestock brought over from farms in New Jersey, thriving patchwork gardens, kids playing in the sunlight, sweet old ladies with their cats.  A tall, seemingly fearless lady looked after them all.

She didn’t tell him about the other monster stalking her.

“Judith,” the Prince said, bringing her out of the fog and back to the moment.  He only rarely referred to her by her full first name.  She was always ‘J’ or ‘Lady J’—and other names, private ones, in the bedroom.  He seized hold of her wrist.  Their eyes locked.

“I’m going,” Lady Judith said.

“J…”

What she wanted to say was that in killing the physical threat moving ever nearer, she hoped the mental one would follow suit.  But the words died on her tongue.

Lady Judith Jane Geronimo accepted a semi-automatic from the man who’d once been an Asshole and now was simply Lath, and boarded the gunboat.

######

“We spotted them an hour ago, swarming over the docks.  Thousands of them,” the Prince said.  “And then, for no clear reason, they started diving in.”

Lady Judith checked her weapon.  “Well, then, let’s hope we brought along enough bullets.”

She gazed up at the fractured skyline of a city that had inspired her from an early age in a time when she was someone else, a different person entirely.  But wasn’t that the nature of being a true actor?  Being able to perform as other people, other characters, even other genders?  When Granny Louise and Aunt Netta and the ladies from the neighborhood gathered around the TV in the afternoon to watch their soaps, when there were soaps, that younger version of Lady Judith had vowed one day to be on them.

“You’ll see me on TV,” she—he—had pledged.

Aunt Netta was gone, Granny Louise years before her.  The soaps were gone, too.  The world had been cancelled.

It was a new show now, with a good cast of players on the islands, people and their pets who depended upon her and Judith’s handsome Prince, her wonderful Prince, who loved her in equal doses of the pure and filthy.

“Thousands of them, diving into the drink!” someone said.

“That one we nailed…it was a scout,” the Prince said.  He raised his binoculars and trained them on the distant waves.  “Fuckers know we’re out here and are trying to reach our islands.”

“That ain’t gonna happen,” Lady Judith said.

“Thank God or whatever’s up there that those stinking, dead fucks float.”  This, from the former Asshole.

“There’s something at port, maybe a hundred feet ahead,” said Prince Joel.

The gunboats were moving so quickly that they reached the target a second or two after Joel’s declaration.  The body was enormous, gray-skinned.

“Shark,” Lady Judith said.

She recognized the great white’s fin, and one other telling fact as they rocketed past, headed to face the real threat to the islands—the monstrosities driven so insane with hunger in their after-death that they’d swarmed into the sea.  For an instant, their eyes crossed glances, and Lady Judith was certain the shark’s wasn’t black but milky-white, that of a dead fish.

If the after-dead had been trying to swim across New York Harbor, and the sharks chasing after sea lions had eaten of their diseased flesh…

“Prince Joel,” she started.

But another, louder voice in the gunboat proclaimed, “There they are.  Christ, look how many there are!”

Lady Judith took aim and fired.

 

END.

by Gregory L. Norris

www.gregorylnorris.blogspot.com

The Zombie A Go Go

“I’m sorry Donovan,”
I knew she was. I could see it in her eyes, even as mine were finishing their necrotic glaze, I could still see her sorrow. I shambled a little closer, and leaned my head onto the point of her revolver. I couldn’t speak; I couldn’t tell her how much I had realized she meant to me. I was too far gone, my vocal chords were shot, but I hoped my gesture told her everything, everything I had realized too late to matter.

 

It had been a rough mission, we’d lost two men. The new guy hadn’t been out from the walls in almost six months, and I’m not sure how he ever survived outside in the first place. He panicked, broke formation, opening a hole and Cedric got bit because of it.

Once we’d finished the mission, I put him down myself, hardest thing I’ve done in a while. I waited as long as I could. Doc says we basically have  24 hours after we reanimate before we become full on flesh eaters. Cedric was getting sicker by the hour, and would have died any minute. So I looked him in the eyes and pulled the trigger. The least I could do was look him in the eyes. We’d almost been friends.

We lost number 22 a few days later. You have to be on patrol for three months of outside time before I even wanted to know your name. It’s easier that way, easier to put the nobodies down when they get bit, easier to insulate myself. 22 was grabbed by one of the sealed ones.

A few weeks into the chaos some general somewhere decided to start catching zombies, and sealing them in wax, metal, and shellac. They never decomposed, and with a little armor they were perfect infantry. They were completely expendable, and harder than hell to kill. Probably was a great strategy for taking shit from other people, but now five years in, the generals are all gone and those of us that are left have to deal with the sealed ones. 22 had walked away from the dune buggy to take a leak, and we think it bit his dick off. We can’t be sure, we heard him scream, and then two shots, one into the dead’s head and the other into his own. I made the newbie grab his gear, and burn him. You had to burn your dead outside of New Hope’s walls. If not then the zombies, or the scavengers, or the cannibals would dig ‘em up, and well that just ain’t right.

“Four score and seven years a go,” the voice recorder said as honest Abe reached from his chain to try and grab number 12.

“Why do you always stare at this one sarge,” 12 asked me.

“I just find him funny. What’s not to find funny, honest Abe a fucking flesh eater. He freed the slaves and here he is chained putting on a show. It’s ironic 12 and funny, not much else is anymore.”

“I dunno, maybe, but I can’t get past Colonel Tom’s voice on the recorder.”

“That makes it funnier, and besides at least the Colonel is trying to brighten up things.”

“Zombie go go dancers behind bulletproof glass and celebrity zombies chained to the wall isn’t what I’d call cheery.”

I looked around the Zombie A Go Go for a second. There were four dancers on stage. Dancers, well that’s what the Colonel called them. They mostly just swayed in time with the music, “Psycho” by the Sonics, I thought. Every so often a drunk would get too close to the glass and they’d try to break loose and get some, but the chains were strong, so it never happened.  Chained to the wall, teeth pulled, were Marilyn Monroe, Elvis, the fatter version, and honest Abe each one with their own audio track.

‘It’s better than outside.”

“And you’re buying, right Sarge?,” number 12 gestured towards the bar.

“For the fallen, and their memory.” I walked towards the bar, Louie was working, he wasn’t bad, but the dead were probably smarter than he was.

“Tell your fat boss to get out here I’ve got some trading to do.”

“I can trade, Donovan.What you got?” Louie asked.

“It’s above your pay grade.” I pulled a fancy bottle of tequila from my pack.

“Sweet,” said Louie. “Too bad no one around here can afford to drink that.”

“That’s why it’s above your pay grade. The colonel will want it for himself, and I aim to make him pay for it.” Louie walked off towards the door behind the bar, and briefly stuck his head in.

“The colonel says he’s not interested.”

“Bullshit,” I said, grabbing a decent bottle of Scotch and an even better bottle of Bourbon.

“Hey, leave those be, those aren’t yours.”

“Yes, they are, and that’s just for starters, every second the colonel makes me wait the price goes up.” I continued reaching under the bar, I pulled up a jar of olives.

The colonel stepped out of his office he wasn’t a tall man, but what he lacked in height he made up in girth.

“Put those down Donovan. We ain’t agreed yet,” he said with his slight southern drawl.

I turned the tequila around, “Forty years old before the fall. I figure that means it’s at least fifty now, and never been opened.” I could see him salivating as he licked his lips. The Colonel had lots of vices, but food and good tequila were his biggest.

“I’m listening,” he said.


“We lost two this time, Cedric and another one. I’m taking what I’ve got here, and you’re giving the rest of the crew whatever they want.”

“Except the upstairs.’

“Including the upstairs,” I said starting to rip the plastic seal from the bottle’s top.

“You don’t even like tequila, Donovan. You won’t drink it.”

“No, but I’ll gladly pour it on the floor, just to watch you lick it up.’

“Now, Donovan, my friend, there’s no need to be extreme. Of course your friends can have the upstairs. Least I can do for you boys, our first defense and all.”

“Everyone. Everyone but the newbie. He got Cedric killed. He gets nothing.  And I need Cherry for the night ” I took my stash with me as I walked towards a table at the front. I never liked the go go show, but tonight I needed the entertainment.

“You’ll need a glass for that,” Cherry said. ‘And probably company too.” She was a waitress, and sometimes companion, upstairs. I liked her, she was honest, and still had an air of the time before the fall about her.

“I need the glass, but you may want to bring two.”

“Oh you’re buying drinks. What’s the occasion?”

“Just bring the glasses.”  I loved scotch. The bourbon was for her. She’d been Cedric’s girl.

She returned with the glasses and I poured us each a double. I told her what had happened, except the part about the newbie. She’d have killed him if she’d known. I didn’t really care if he died, I almost killed him myself, but I cared about her. She didn’t need to become part of this world, the killing, the fighting. Like I’d said, she’d kept an air of the old world around her. We needed that. I needed that, to know there were still some dreamers left.

She cried and we drank until the bottles were empty.

“I need some air Donovan,” she said as she stumbled up from the table. I tried to get up with her.
“No,” she said. “I need to be alone for a few minutes, don’t worry I’ll be back in a few.”
I fell back into the chair, almost missing it entirely.

“Sarge?”

I looked up. The newbie was standing in front of me.

“You don’t get to call me that. You don’t get to call me anything!”

“It wasn’t my fault. I mean…”

“You’re damn right it wasn’t your fault. I never should have let you out there. You weren’t ready. It was my fault.” I stumbled as I tried to stand. The newbie caught me.

“Why’d you even want back outside.” I asked him.

“I needed to prove I could. When you found me with my other group, they were all dead. I’d fallen asleep on watch and we got overrun. I needed to make up for that.”

“By getting Cedric killed,” I took a big swing at him, only connecting with the air. He returned the favor and connected with my gut.

“I hope you enjoyed that,” I said while heaving my guts up. “In the morning I’m removing you from the patrols, you piece of shit.”

There were only two rules at the Zombie A Go Go, no fighting, and no puking. I’d just broken both of them. The Colonel’s goons would throw me out the back door, before I could even get off the floor. I could hear them rushing towards me, when I saw Cherry’s face in mine.

“Donovan, I need to show you something.” She tried to help me up, but we both kept falling every time we almost got our balance. She kept trying to talk to me, but her words were too slurred, too desperate to understand.

I could fee Tiny’s boot on my hand. “Get her upstairs, and get them out of here.” Several arms grabbed me and I could feel myself being dragged towards the back door. I could hear the bar lifting from the door. I swung as hard as I could. A goon’s fist cracked against my jaw.

“You’ll stand a better chance if you don’t fight. The fresh blood will only rile them up if they’re out there.” The city was surrounded by a series of barriers, we called rings, the back door opened to the outer ring. It wasn’t zombie proof. We’d decided to give them access, they get in through the open arch and wander around impaling themselves on traps we’d left. The few times we’d been attacked by marauders, a patrol had gone out the back door of the club, and shut the arch. If the marauders got in the outer ring acted like a zombie moat. You didn’t want to be in the outer ring  ever, let alone drunk and at night.

I could feel the air rush in carrying the stench of decay and death with it, as I felt myself  hurled outside. The newbie landed next to me as I heard the door slam shut.

“What do we do Sarge,” the newbie asked.

“What we always do, survive,” I stood as best I could, and the newbie helped steady me.

“Cedric and I buried a gear pack in an old refrigerator four buildings to the left.” I gestured as best I could to the end of the alley. The full moon lit the ring fairly well. In the afternoon, I’d tell the council and suggest we put up some tarps to block out the moonlight, no need letting potential invaders have a good view.

“If we move quietly the dead might not hear us.” Newbie nodded in understanding. We stumbled down the alley. He was ready to turn the corner when I stopped him. I wished I’d still had my gear, but the goons had taken my pack. I peeked my head around the corner. Of course there was a zombie in front of the fridge. I reached into my pocket. They hadn’t taken my pocket knife.

I pulled back from the corner. “If we move slowly towards it, it may not notice us until we get close.” I showed him my knife. “I’ll shank it before it even knows we’re there.”

“What if it does notice us?”

“I’ll run towards it, when it moves for me you run for the gear. Grab the crossbow and shoot it, If I haven’t taken it out already.” I was a fairly simple plan, the dead weren’t that smart, so one zombie would be easy. We turned the corner and started staggering towards the zombie. We were halfway there when it turned towards us and started moving our way.

“It knows we’re here,” he whispered.
“No, they move in herds. It probably just wants company.” I could see him shaking as we inched closer. It let out a yowl as we got closer. It didn’t want company, it wanted dinner.

“What do we do,” he shouted.


“Keep your voice down, and stick to the plan.” I pushed him out of my way as I charged the zombie.


“Shit.”


“What?” he said as he dashed towards the refrigerator.


“He’s sealed. Get the axe before the bow, I need to bash this fucker.” The zombie grabbed me and we rolled toward the building wall. There was no way I was getting my small blade into his skull. I could keep him at bay, even drunk, but I needed to get that axe. I looked at the fridge. The newbie had the door open and the pack out. He grabbed the crossbow.

“The axe, not the bow. I need the axe.”

“Look behind you, we need everything.”

“Shit,” I had forgotten to look both ways. I flipped my dancing partner towards the wall and could see at least three more shambling towards us. I started stepping back towards the newbie. As long as he stayed put, he could hand me the axe when I got there. I tried jabbing my knife through the zombie’s throat, but the sealed skin was like leather and refused to budge. I heard a bolt fly through the air. It struck one of the approaching ones in the neck. The second hit its eyes and it fell. They weren’t sealed. The next few bolts whizzed into the night, as I reached my hand behind me feeling the axe handle. With a quick swing the sealed one fell as the axe split his head like an overripe melon.

I could see several more in the moonlight, trailing behind the ones almost on top of us.

“Give me the crossbow, I’m a better shot.” There was no answer. I turned quickly to see the newbie running into the distance carrying all of the gear with him.

“You fucking coward. I’m getting you thrown out in the morning.” I charged the zombies, as long as they weren’t sealed the axe was all I needed. The first two fell easily under the axe. I stopped in front of the backdoor alley, catching my breath, as the other three approached. I was sure one was sealed. The spiked football pads and helmet were a sure sign it had been someone’s infantry.

They surrounded me. I pushed them away with the axe and my free hand. The infantry man raised its head lunging for me. I swung with all my might at his neck. The axe stuck for a moment, but then his head rolled to the ground with a thud. With him gone the other two were quick work.

I stood straight, fuck exile. I’ll kill him myself, I thought. That’s when I felt a sharp pain in my chest and everything started spinning as I fell to the ground. “The fucking coward shot me,” I thought, as everything went black.

I woke up face down in the dirt. I must have killed all the undead, before the noob shot me, since from what I could tell nothing had taken a chunk out of me. I couldn’t believe he shot me in the back. If he had managed to kill me I would have turned. No one does that to a person. When I find him I’m going to kill him slow.

I staggered a little getting to my feet, and started brushing myself off, when I snagged my hand on my chest. It didn’t hurt, but my hand was clearly stuck to something. I looked down. My hand was stuck to the tip of the crossbow bolt sticking out of my chest. I froze.

“Shit!” I stood still for a moment, then pulled my hand free.


“Shit!” There wasn’t any blood. I grabbed my wrist with my other hand.

 

There wasn’t a pulse.


“Fuck!”


“I’m dead.” I turned slowly around looking at the outer ring. Everything moved in slow motion. It was crawling with zombies, a herd must have moved in last night after he killed me. With this many zombies the city would be on lockdown until the clean-up crews came to thin the herd.

“Shit.”

They’d kill me on sight if they knew I’d turned.  I had a few hours until I’d really start to turn. Right now, I’d risen, but I still looked alive and could speak. According to Doc, it took twenty-four hours to go full on flesh eater. I grabbed the bolt and pulled as hard as I could. It made a sucking sound as it exited my chest. Next I needed something to cover my wounds. I looked around. I didn’t think my fellow undead would mind if I borrowed some of their clothes. I saw a biker a few buildings down, still decked in his leathers. It’d be a new look for me, but the gloves would cover my hand, and the vest my chest.

I walked through the zombies with ease, occasionally taking one out with the axe. From what we knew they hunted by smell. I could do whatever I wanted because I didn’t smell alive.

Thunk. I could hear the bar on the Go Go being moved.


“Shit,” The cleaning crew was coming out. I grabbed the biker by the shoulders, he almost looked shocked as I spun him around taking his vest and one glove. I was fighting for the other one as I heard the door fully open. No time for stealth now, I thought. I smashed his head with the axe handle and started dressing. I could smell something faintly in the air, like iron mixed with raw meat. I could smell the cleaning crew, and so could the herd. They all started moving towards the door. I could hear 15 sparking the flame thrower, and 22 muttering.

I watched the herd fill the alley, there were too many for the cleaning crew. There were  at least two other crews coming out other doors, the watchers would have seen how big the herd was, but they weren’t going to get here nearly in time.

“Hey you dead fucks! Over here!” I yelled banging on the old refrigerator. The back of the herd turned towards me breaking off from the alley.

“What the hell?” asked 15, as he turned the flame thrower too high.

“Is that you, Sarge?” I could hear 22 grunting as he thrust his pike into a few dead heads.

“Who else would be dumb enough to be out here with the herd?” I swung for the nearest zombie taking the top of his head with my axe blade.

“We looked for you when they called for clean up.” I could hear the gravel and broken asphalt crunch under their feet as they moved forward into the herd.

“I puked last night. Tiny threw me out here. Sobered up just in time to hide in the fridge.” I started swinging harder, taking several with one blow. If they’d had expressions, they would have been confused. After all, I was one of them.

We met where the alley opened into the outer ring. 15 turned the flamethrower off, not wanting to burn me, and we took the remaining ones out with our blades.

“New look, Sarge?”

“Yeah, I told you I puked. This smelled better than what I was wearing. Or at least I think that’s why I changed, some things are a little blurry. Have you guys seen the noob?”

“No I heard he got tossed, when we were upstairs. Tiny was busy,” said 22.

“I thought he got tossed with you Sarge,” 15 said as he looked me over.

“Yeah, a lot of things are blurry.” I said as I turned towards the ring. “How many crews they send out?”

“Just us. Herd was pretty centralized here.”

“You sure they threw the noob out with me?”

“That’s what he heard.”

“You guys can go back in. I’ll circle the ring once to see if I can find him, or at least what’s left.” 22 started for the door. 15 paused, like he knew something was up.

“You sure, Sarge?”

“You haven’t been with us long enough to know an order. Let’s go,”

“Listen to him 15. Thanks Dan. Cedric has me shook up a little. I just need to clear my head.” 22 smiled. I’d never used his name before. I knew I was going to get put down before him, so distance didn’t seem so important anymore. I walked away into the outer ring. I needed to find the noob, so I could put my axe right between his eyes.

I followed the ring, heading in the direction he’d ran from me. There wasn’t a trail. The herd and the breeze had muddled the tracks. Every so often I’d see a zombie with a few bolts in him so I knew I was going the right way. I walked a few more meters, and in the distance I could see the crossbow on the ground. He’d dropped it. Why? There were plenty of bolts in the bag, from what I’d seen he didn’t use them all.

I looked ahead I could see a dumpster, and the gear bag besides it. The dumpster was right on the other side of the alley where we’d started. I hadn’t noticed how far I had walked. I guess being undead, distance had no meaning. I could see from the tracks in the dirt the dumpster had been moved at least a few times recently.  

I pushed it to the side. There was a hole in the wall, just big enough for a person without gear. He’d dropped the bag, and the bow, when he saw the tunnel, and crawled in.

The outer ring was supposed to be secure. It was when we built it. Someone had opened this tunnel into the city, but who? I wanted to know, but more importantly I wanted to find the coward. I backed into the tunnel, really more of a crawl space, and pulled the handle welded to the back of the dumpster closing it as I backed in. Normally I wouldn’t back into anything, but what was the worst that could happen? I was already dead.

I crawled downwards a few meters when the space suddenly opened into a room. I stood up turning around in a very dim light.  Looking up, I could see I was in an old basement. The windows on the floor above were mostly boarded up. I could see them because the floor above had all but collapsed, leaving some studs and rotted floor boards. There were a few doors at the tops of stairs along the walls leading up to the ground floor. They were crudely made, and had obviously been made after the fall. Most were dusty and hadn’t been used recently.  Two were cleared. One lead to the Go Go, and it was closed. The other was slightly ajar. He’d gone through that one.

The stairs creaked as I climbed them. I could hear the music blaring from the other door. They must be opening early today, I thought. I opened the door slowly. It lead into a storeroom, probably the Colonel’s but I didn’t know for sure. I could see a partially covered window past the boxes and clutter.

When I got to it, it was locked. He hadn’t gone out this way. I stepped back to see the rest of the room. The boxes were medical supplies and junk food. The Colonel had been holding out on the rest of the city. I could make out something slumped in the corner. I sniffed the air. Raw meat and iron wafted from whoever it was. It had to be the noob.

I could see the cowards head peeking out from under his coat. I raised my axe. I could split his head open and then eat him. Fitting, since he’d killed me. I’d probably turn immediately.

The doc said giving into the urge and feeding, probably made the process speed up. One of the goons would find me and put me down later. I raised the axe higher and then put it down. I cleared my throat instead. If the goons didn’t find me I might get out into the city, and hurt someone who mattered. I cleared my throat again.

“Do you always take a nap after shooting a man in the back?”

He jumped to his feet. “Holy shit you’re not dead.” He smiled wide. He was glad to see me? He wasn’t a coward, he was fucking nuts. I raised my axe. He looked startled and started to retreat.

“I found you face down in the dirt, no pulse. Are you dead?”

“Undead,” I said lowering my axe. He wet himself as he started shaking. “You didn’t kill me did you?”

“If you’re going to eat me, get it over with. I can’t imagine I taste good.”

I started laughing, “What’s your name noob?”

“Michael,” he stammered. “Why?”

“Because I always name my food. Last burger I ate was named Chuck.” He started crying a little. I think I smiled, but I can’t be sure because I was losing feeling in my face.

“I’m sorry Michael, but you have to admit it was a little funny.” He looked me in the eyes.

“Cherry was in here when I found the room, at least I think it was her, they beat her up bad.”

“Are you sure?”

“No, she didn’t say anything, she was unconscious. I heard Tiny and the goons coming up the stairs so I hid. They dragged her off.”

“Then you fell asleep?” I was beginning to think I was going to have to kill him again.

“I couldn’t go back to the ring, there was a herd coming in. I couldn’t go to the Go Go, and I can’t get out of here. I sat down waiting to die. Must have dozed off.”

“How’d you get in here?”

“After I found your body I started running back into the ring. I don’t know why, I just ran. I saw the dumpster and the tunnel. Some of the goons were coming out of it. They didn’t see me. So I dropped the bow trying to shuffle like I was dead.” I slumped down next to him. My body was starting to stiffen, and even though I couldn’t feel much, I hurt.

“One of them saw me. He was about to shoot when he heard the herd. They threw some bags of stuff in the dumpster and crawled back in.”

Odd I thought. We reused everything. No one was making anything new. We didn’t throw things away.


“What was in the bags?” He shuffled his feet, like he was searching for an answer.

“I don’t know. I waited as long as I could by the dumpster and then crawled into the tunnel. The goons were better than the herd, I thought. I’m not sure anymore.”

Why did the Go Go goons have a secret passage?  Who shot me? Michael wasn’t  going to be much help, so I decided to go back to the tunnel.

“Noob, you got two choices. Since you didn’t shoot me I won’t kill you.” He looked relieved and somewhat surprised.

“Decent of you.” He smiled a little bit.

“Don’t smile. I’m less than a day from eating your face off. Not much to smile about from my end.”  He jumped to attention like I had just called a drill.

“You want to go out the tunnel and see what’s in the bags, or watch for goons at the entrance?”

“Neither,” he mumbled.

“Fine I guess I could just eat your face off now,” I reached for him. “Stand still, dammit I’ve got to get used to this.”

“The herd’s dead, right?”

“Deader than me.”

“Fine. I’ll dumpster dive.” He started for the door, as I struggled to stand.

“Michael give me a hand.” I reached out for him. Ten minutes ago I was going to kill him, now he was my only life line. That was irony. Not Abe irony, but still irony. He gently grabbed my arm, and started to pull.

“It’s not going to come off damn it. Well not yet. I think it takes a while to rot.” We walked from the storage room into the basement, and it was clear. He started to crawl up the tunnel. He was about half way up, when I heard the Go Go door start to open. I ducked under the stairs as fast as I could. I could smell the raw meat and iron. This time was different, than last, I could taste the meat, and it tasted good. I could hear the footsteps as they came down the stairs. I held still, even though every instinct I had told me to lunge, to feed, to feast.

Tiny walked past me first, not seeming to notice. Like the colonel he was a man of many vices, food being the most obvious. He weighed at least 350, and he used that weight to demolish anyone in his way.

“Why can’t we keep the fucking chips in the bar?” He muttered to himself as he started up the second set of stairs. “I’m getting tired of the stairs.”

He entered the other building. I moved to under the other stairs. I could smell meat again, but different than people. I scanned the room to see what else was here. I could hear scurrying sounds in the wall behind me, as dust began falling on my face. I looked up, as a rat poked its head from a hole, and the rest of it followed. It dropped on me.

Being dead was an advantage. It could crawl on me all I day and I couldn’t feel it. It crawled around my chest sniffing the vest. Maybe the biker had some food in his pockets. It stopped on my chest looking up at me. Maybe I had a pet. Then it bit me. I was the food.

The door opened above. I could hear the boards creak under tiny’s weight. I grabbed the rat, pulling it away from my face, Tiny thudded down the stairs. The rat squirmed in my hand, as Tiny reached the bottom. The rat started to squeak, I squeezed it. Blood burst from its mouth. I could smell the blood, it smelled delicious. It smelled like life. It smelled like salvation. I thrust the rat’s head into my mouth and bit. Its head tore loose from its body and it crunched in my mouth. I tried to savor it, but I could feel the frenzy coming.

“You’ve looked better, Sarge.” Tiny was standing over me holding a gun in one hand and a half empty bag of cheetos in the other. “I guess I’ll finish the job now.”

“Hey Sarge, you gotta see what was in the dumpster.” Michael shouted as a duffle bag slid down the tunnel. Tiny turned and I leapt as fast as I could, which wasn’t very fast, but Tiny was slower. I pushed him to the ground. I wanted to eat him. I need to tear into his flesh, but I maintained control as we grappled for his belt knife.

“Finished?” I couldn’t get the rest of the words out, my vocal chords were stiffening.

“Oh, this is going to be fun,” Tiny said as he used his weight to crush me to the ground. “You ain’t full on zombie yet. Never did like you.” His fist slammed into my face. I grabbed again for his knife.


“Why?” He looked down at me, puzzled.


“Colonel said you knew too much.”  He slammed his massive hand into my face again.

“Watered down booze? Mugging passed out drunks? I don’t care.” I almost got my hands on his knife. He pulled back a little laughing.

“You didn’t even fucking know?” His belly rolled with his hard laughs. I grabbed for his knife again.

This time I got it, and thrust it into his fat belly. He started punching harder. I heard my nose snap, and then I saw the axe split his skull. So much blood, so much delicious blood. I wiggled the knife trying to free his guts.

“Sarge, snap out of it.” I looked to see Michael standing over me, Tiny’s pistol pointing at my head. “Sarge, you still in there?”

I spit a piece of Tiny’s flab out of my mouth. “Barely,” I growled.

“You’re not too far gone yet? The blood must be triggering you.” I hoped he was right. He kept the pistol pointed at me. “As long as you’re still good you need to see this.” He opened the bag, dumpling it out. I looked at the stuff, books, and sketch pads. Michael was pointing at a charcoal of me and Cedric.

“That’s you.” I nodded.

“Who’d draw a picture of you?” I struggled to push the last of Tiny off of me.

“Cherry,” I struggled for the sounds, “drew it.” What did they do to her? I could feel my flesh lust residing a little, but my blood lust was raging. Michael helped me to my feet. I ripped the picture from her sketch pad folding it as I put it in my pocket.

“I need to go into the Go Go. I need to find Cherry, and settle a score.” He looked sympathetically at me. I paused for a minute, words were getting hard to find.

“I won’t be coming out, but I could use your help.”

“I owe Cedric, Sarge. What’s the plan?”

“We walk in the door, and go straight for the colonel.” Michael handed me the axe, which I tucked into the back of my jeans, then started to hand me the gun. I waved it away. “Shoot me if I try to eat anyone that doesn’t deserve it.” He nodded, putting the pistol in his jacket pocket.

“You look like a fucking zombie, Sarge. Won’t get ten feet.” I felt my face. Tiny had shoved my nose half way into my head.

“Here use this,” Michael said as he tied his do rag around my face. Having them think I might rob them would get me further than them thinking I was a zombie.

I opened the door into the Go Go. The music was blaring and the dancers were on stage, but the club was empty, other than a few goons at the bar. No colonel. As long as the goons didn’t look up we had the advantage. I glanced at the dancers as we walked by. There was a new one, she started grabbing at me.

We were halfway to the bar when a goon turned around. “We ain’t open yet. How the fuck did you get in?” I grasped for a response.

“Tiny let us in, special show upstairs,” Michael said. The goons settled a little, as we walked towards them. There were only three. We could probably take them if we could get close enough, and Michael didn’t panic.

We were close enough now I could smell their meat. The goon turned towards me.

“Which girls?” I grabbed my axe and swung.  He fell before the other two could even move. Michael shot one in the stomach. His aim still sucked. The other one lunged at me thrusting a knife into my side. I tried biting him but the bandana got in the way.

Michael quickly pulled him off of me, before I could bite him.

“Where’s the Colonel motherfucker,” Michael hissed as he pushed his pistol into the goon’s temple. I pulled down my bandana, ready to bite.

“Right here,” the colonel said as Michael’s brains splattered all over my face. I could smell them, and the gunpowder from the Colonel’s shotgun.

“Damn, Donovan. You’ve seen better days haven’t you?” He walked around the bar keeping the shot gun aimed at me. The goon moved, closer grabbing his knife sticking out of my side and twisting it.

“I can’t feel it you moron.”


“Too bad,” he said stooping to grab Michael’s pistol. I brought my knees into his chest as quickly as I could, pulling him between me and the shotgun barrel. He stood up just as the gun went off. The blast ripped through his chest pushing me backwards. As I fell, I ripped the knife out of my side, slashing it towards the colonel. He dove for the pistol, but I grabbed it first.

He looked at me as I oriented the gun between his eyes. “It was nothing personal Donovan, just business. Without the dancers I don’t have a club.” I waved the pistol gesturing him towards the dancers.

“I,” I moaned, “Don’t… know what… you’re talking about.”

“Sorry to hear that, you always paid your bills.” We reached the stage glass, and he unlocked the door. The dancers stopped dancing. I could smell their blood, and their meat.

“You sick… fuck… they’re alive.” As he walked over towards the girls, all of them cowered away from him, as much as their chains allowed, except the new one. She was mumbling and grabbing towards me. I kept the pistol on the Colonel as I shambled towards her. I pulled her blonde wig off as I peeled back layers of sealed zombie flesh from her face. Cherry. The Colonel started to run. I shot him in the leg as I stripped the rest of the undead from Cherry. He’d sewn her mouth shut, except for a small opening in the middle. I looked at her and turned to him.

“They had to eat Donovan, but I couldn’t have them talking.” I ran towards him, shoving the pistol in his mouth. I couldn’t pull the trigger, and I knew that. All the blood and brains I’d turn on the spot. I’d eat him, but then I’d turn on Cherry and the other dancers. I couldn’t risk that. “Keys,” I said pulling the gun from his mouth. He fumbled in his pocket pulling the key out and trying to hand it to me.

“You do.” I gestured the gun towards Cherry. He waddled towards her unlocking her chains. With her free hand she gave him a right cross that made Tiny seem weak. As he fell to the floor she grabbed the key and finished unlocking herself. I kept the pistol trained on him. Cherry unlocked the other dancers. I could feel myself getting weaker. I tried to say something. “Arrghwa dalt,” is all that came out.

“He’s turning. Kill him now!” the Colonel shouted. Cherry walked towards me and gestured for my knife. I handed it to her. He was right. She took the knife and I closed my eyes.

“Fuck you asshole,” she said. I opened my eyes to see Cherry and the others girls attacking the colonel more savagely than any undead.  I put my hand on her shoulder. She turned quickly to face me. I could see the broken stitches hanging from her mouth.

I pointed at the colonel with the pistol and gestured towards the back door. She pulled the other girls off of him,

“Let’s get him up girls.” The dancers yanked him to his feet. And dragged him to the door, he was barely conscious and started to cry. I pried the bar off the door, and they drug him outside.

“Please don’t do this,” he sobbed. “Don’t leave me out here. I don’t stand a chance. I can barely walk.” He got to his feet and showed how he couldn’t put weight on the leg I’d shot. I walked over to him pointing the gun at his head.

“Thank you Donovan.” He closed his eyes waiting for the kill shot, that wasn’t coming. I pointed the gun down quickly and shot him in the gut. The gut shot would immobilize him, and I knew any deads in the outer ring would hear the shot and come for him. Besides, all the fat drenched blood smelled delicious.

I could feel the frenzy coming on- the sweat, flesh and blood. I tried to put the gun to my head. I couldn’t bring my arm above my waist. I was losing control fast. I lifted my hand towards Cherry, the pistol loosely dangling from it. She took the gun, stepping back, and pointed it towards me.

“I’m sorry Donovan,”

I knew she was. I could see it in her eyes. Even as mine were finishing their necrotic glaze, I could still see her sorrow. I shambled a little closer, and leaned my head onto the point of her revolver. I couldn’t speak. I couldn’t tell her how much she and Cedric had meant to me. I was too far gone, my vocal chords stiff. I reached into my pocket and gave her the folded piece of paper. She opened the sketch she had made of Cedric and I. I couldn’t say what I was feeling, but I hoped my gesture told her everything.

I shut my eyes. I could smell the gunpowder as everything went black.

END.

 

By DS Maiorca





















Children of the Apocalypse

 

We stagger into the thick bush, pushing aside branches and debris. I can’t see clearly; the sun is too bright, and it’s right in my eyes. It blinds me. But dusk is only two hours from now, and we can’t afford any delay. Jack is a few meters ahead – she prefers scouting the territory, to make sure we don’t fall straight into a trap. Unintentional as it might be, given the nature of the danger. But deadly nonetheless.

I detect movement into the woods, but she’s too busy avoiding the twigs to pay attention. I slow down, waiting for the hidden shape to emerge. I’m not disappointed. A whoosh – a low, snapping sound, followed by a squelching noise of trashed leaves. She turns her head, alarmed, whilst my arrow hisses and darts just a few inches away from her left ear.

“Norman, what the-”

A body falls to the ground at her feet, and she jumps back in a hysteric jolt. “Christ!”

“You’d better be careful, my friend.” I come forward, collecting the tiny bolt from the corpse’s head, dipping it in an iodine-arsenic solution and putting it back into the quiver. “Birmingham is known to be one of the most infested areas in the whole country. I wonder why this one was all by himself. Poor chap. He just wanted a taste of your sweet blood.”

“Well, he can taste this.”

She shoots him twice in the mush of its exposed meninges that scatter further on the ground. As if we needed additional infectious stuff. But Jack always goes for the overkill. It eases her tension. And she prefers bullets, whilst I’m more confident with my silver, recurve crossbow and my wooden darts, which I personally make. They’re cheap, fast and mortal, and good wood is the only thing I need. I also carry mini-frag hand grenades though, for fast-paced action. My victim lies there, lifeless as the dead forest that surrounds us. We call them Raptors, and that’s somehow a misnomer. But they don’t get offended, I guess.

Jack looks back at me. She’ll never admit it, but she has been scared shitless by the ambush. “Americans were just right. Let’s leave this shithole.” She says eventually, putting her gun back in the holster.

“Where for? Space, maybe?”

“You’re so funny.”

“And you’re so smart. Me, I’m European. I’m not leaving my country to hordes of famished Raptors. They’ll have to kill us before.”

“They will.”

“They won’t. We’re not as soft as you whiny North-Americans – yes, Canadians included.” I say with a smile on my face. I like provoking her – hurt national pride always reacts on cue. As if this bullshit made sense any longer. Who cares about who you are, provided you’re not one of Them? And fuck nationality too. But Jack never disappoints me.  “You French faggot!”

Should I remind her the whole story? At the beginning, we gave this weird plague a fancy name –the Andromeda virus. Because it happened as in an old novel of the late XX century. One day a satellite came back carrying a nasty bug from outer space, escaping all decontamination procedures. After a while, we didn’t call it anything any longer. We were too busy dealing with the disaster. The world witnessed humans turning into monsters impossible to define, even less to contain. Their ghastly look and their predatory behaviour did resemble zombies of the best movie tradition. But they weren’t zombies. They didn’t eat flesh; they feasted on blood, without being vampires either. Not that luck – they didn’t turn victims into something like them, just into tiny lifeless shreds. And they were blind, with oddly bluish corneas. The plague that created them shattered the planet like a thousand cataclysms. The ones that escaped being infected started running and hiding, before deciding to fight back. For us, the Children of the Apocalypse, running has never been an option. We’re the second generation after Andromeda. Not only do we not remember a world without the Raptors; we’re not even able to imagine one. For us it’s as far away in time as the fucking Roman Empire. Our amazing progress of the last fifty years has given us clean fusion energy and blossoming space colony projects, but not a goddamn way to deal with this virus. Not yet – not anytime soon. Our only option is to chase and kill them, as many as we possibly can. “I’m Scottish French. And wait at least to try me before calling me names. Tonight?”

“In a parallel universe.”  She sneers in defiance. “You can have all your blood sucked first.”

I probably will.

“You’re too noisy, both of you.” Ethan comes forward, put his gloves on and quietly starts examining the corpse. He turns it on its back, concentrating on its vitreous eyes. Good for him: they’re still there.

And he’s right of course. You don’t go hunting this way, even less on a high-risk mission. Ethan has been with our group since year one or so, but we don’t know jackshit about him. He’s older than us, this much I can tell; he looks in his mid-twenties – long dark hair, tattoos and a handful of earrings and bracelets. But he’s built like a special forces operative, and the precision of his sniper rifle is likewise.

From the accent it’s impossible to tell where he come from, no matter if his English is flawless. His complexion is darker than ours, and yet his eyes are the clearest I’ve ever seen. Almond-shaped ice blue. The girls like him – all of them, Jack included  – but grudgingly: he doesn’t pay attention to them. Or to anybody. He shows affection just to the little ones – and once he admitted he had two baby brothers. And hell no, I didn’t dare to ask what happened to them. Ignorance is bliss, in our age.

Jack observes him with an impatient regard. “What are you checking the bastard for, exactly? A passport?”

Her sarcasm is obviously misplaced. Ethan ignores her.

“Happy with your findings? Maybe you haven’t realised it yet, Einstein, but they’re all the same, ugly and nasty and famished.”

“Quiet.” I interrupt her with a gesture. Another muffled noise. A far away screech, carried by the wind, and a not so far away sound of broken twigs.

Ethan stands up. “Let’s clear the area. We’re not in for a fight today.”

He’s right again. An annoying trait of his, this one – no wonder Jack always gets so pesky. But today we do hunt for something else, and as he has succinctly stated, it’s time to fucking leave.

*****

It’s almost night when we finally reach Solihull. Birmingham looms in the distance. I look at the city – at what remains of it. My mom worked here as a History lecturer in the University. But she, as many others, had been obliged to abandon it and go North during the second Escape. In retrospect, that came as a surprise. Yes, because after ten years or so of complete disarray since Andromeda, the world had reorganised. Asians – Indians and Chinese – had cleared up their premises and shown the rest of the world how to deal with a threat you can’t get away from. First, selecting an area conveniently remote and then luring over as many Raptors as possible. Then, blasting them with high-yield neutron nukes. Success. Replicated ever since whenever possible. The US government chose instead to quarantine entire states, leaving them to the ghouls. Hoping them to die sooner or later for lack of nourishment. Some of them did, according to estimates. And what about Europe? In Europe, now as before, we were structurally incapable to come out with a coherent strategy. While politicians discussed in their underground bunkers, people on the surface had taken interesting initiatives. Like survival, for example, and restless hunting expeditions. For twenty years furious fights ravaged the whole continent. And just when things seemed going into the right direction, a new wave of Raptors came out of nowhere. Giving origin to what has been called the Second Escape, six years ago.  In the UK, all cities have been abandoned, apart from London and Glasgow. Small communities represent, now and since the beginning, the best bet for survival. But whenever packs of Raptors are famished enough to attack en masse, things can still go horribly wrong. This is what happened in Tweedmouth, near Berwick, two years ago. Myself, Jacklyn, Kiera, Aidan and Marie are the only ones left from a community of more than 10,000. We took away all the children we could carry and we settled down in the outskirts of Newark. And Raptors apart, life isn’t smooth. Diseases exist nonetheless, and the long-forgotten smallpox now threatens our small community. Kiera is the only one with medical training. She has put all sick children in isolation, but that’s not enough. With no doctors and no facilities, we need medical supplies. We have to go to a big city, into one of the old hospitals, and pillage their storage.

It was a simple decision to head South hunting, this time for medicines – as dangerous as it might sound. Less simple was to decide who had the best chances to get the job done and make it back to camp alive. We’re roughly the same age, with the sole exception of Kiera, Jacklyn’s sister. But she’s barely nineteen nonetheless.  The two are the foreigners in our group: their parents moved to Scotland ten years ago. Both dead in the siege of Tweedmouth – together with the other adults. We drew straws. Chance kept us alive, chance had to select the hunters. Kiera was excluded from the ballot and Jack and I won the lucky draw. Ethan joined us.

“Do we know if anybody still lives here?” Jack sounds uneasy as we walk through the deserted streets.

“Apart from the Raptors, you mean.”

She doesn’t reply. She looks worried, but I’m not. It has been a while since the last time I’ve fought, and I’m right in the mood now. Truth is, I’m after a good hunt today – and they are my prey.  I’ll worry about medical supplies later.

I don’t have to wait a lot. A compact screeching group emerges from a gutted building, waving rather enthusiastically at us.

Jack swears and starts firing. Ethan and I take position at her side. The Raptors fall with impressive regularity, one shot, one down, and while the two of us advance to make it quicker, Jack remains behind. Too bad, because another group comes out from a lateral street, few meters from her. She screams and stumbles, falling down. What comes after is just too fast: Ethan drops rolling on the ground and hauls Jack away, while he keeps shooting at the nearest ones. I reach for my pouch and throw a hand grenade to finish up what Ethan has started.

Screeches stop. There’s a moment of eerie silence. We’re look around – nobody else is coming. We’re safe for now. Ethan collects Jack’s weapons, while I get her into my arms, still trembling.  

* * *

We decide to stop for the night – an abandoned house in the suburbs. It’s not safe for us to be there – no need to make things any worse by wandering after sunset. The Raptors are more aggressive at night, and diminished light makes us vulnerable. Ethan checks the place and decides it’s reasonably ok for us to stay. And stay we do.

Jack is shaken, and she’s right. What if Ethan had not been there? And talking about him… he looks concerned too. Somehow I feel it’s not the Raptors he’s worried about.

“Can’t you sleep, mate?”

He shrugs. “You know why so many people died in the beginning? Because they could not believe what they were seeing.”

“Well, how to blame them? At the beginning, people even believed the Raptors were rising from their graves. Like zombies, you know, or ghosts. Not exactly common sense, you’d give it to me.”

“Is it so? In your religion, that’s a given. The God you worship came back from the dead on the third day in an aura of immortality. He promised the resurrection of the flesh, and that’s why you stopped cremating the bodies.”

“Yes, but …He said nothing about a penchant for blood. Without mentioning an alien virus.”

“Alien? I rather think Andromeda was caused by an Earth-born bacterium, whose RNA was altered by cosmic rays. It won’t be impossible, you see. Not even unlikely.”

I nod. “I’m sure I’ve read something of the kind. But it was sci-fi.”

“Reality is stranger than fiction, and on top of that it has not to make sense. I’m sure you’ve read this too.”

Ethan remains in silence for a while. “We’re going to die, all of us.” He says eventually. “Our species, Norman.”

“You mean the Europeans? Our generation – the Children of the Apocalypse?”

He shakes his head. “The Homo Sapiens Sapiens has dominated this planet for how long -60.000, 70.000 years? Maybe we’re at the end of the road.”

Ah. It’s not just us he’s talking about. “C’mon, mate. They’re humans too, the Raptors – even if they don’t remember it. Name apart, they’re not fucking dinosaurs. Or aliens.” I wave at the stars. “OK, they’re as dangerous. We’re not sure even now how Andromeda spreads. But the Raptors still belong to our species. And we’ll find a way to fight them down.” I’m suddenly annoyed. I believe what I’m saying. “They’re not dinosaurs, and they’re not smart either. You mentioned the Homo Sapiens. Right, we’ve inherited this planet with our brain, the same this sort of monsters seems devoid of. And it will be the key to our survival, as it has always been.”

Ethan’s stare makes me shudder. There’s something in his cold eyes that scares me silly. “What if this is not the whole story, Norman?” He never blinks. Maybe that’s the reason why he makes people nervous, me included. “What if they are the new species and we’re like the old Neanderthal – stronger, maybe smarter and yet condemned to extinction?”

“No – species reproduce and have a sort of primitive organisation.” I say. “Not just mammals, even insects. Guess what? They’ve none.”

He doesn’t reply. He’s asleep in minutes, leaving me wondering about that strange discussion.

*****

The sun is high in the sky, but weather is so bad that we can’t see shit ten meters ahead. There’s fog, too, as if we needed any more excitement. We cross the city centre, quietly walking into that ramshackle area near the canal once known as Brindley Place – with its fancy bars and its glimmering lights. Nothing has survived. Gee – I expected desolate, but this is a notch up.

We advance in formation, covering all sides. We want to avoid yesterday’s incident.

I hear a click, like the safety of a rifle going off. I turn at once – I can’t see anything. But I know I’m right – somebody’s there. Ethan looks at me and put his hand on the gun. Before he’s able to take it out, an acute voice makes us stop.

“Freeze.”

Three people, armed like ninjas, appear. I attempt a step forward, but one of them aims straight at my head – her gun loaded and ready.

“Who are you?”

“Norman. Scottish. Hunter.”

“Hunter of what?”

“Generally Raptors, but not today. I’m more into medical supplies at the moment.”

“And you search for them in Birmingham?” Her sneer conveys her surprise.

“Why, London or Manchester are any better?” Being sassy is perhaps not the smartest thing I can do right now, but hey, it’s not as if I’m not in danger already. I’m in danger since I was in my mother’s womb.  “And you are…?”

“We own this place. Nobody goes in and out without checking out with me first. Not even those fucking Raptors.”  The girl’s eyes squint a little. She observes me for a couple of seconds, and then she lowers her gun. “Shelby, lead them to the old hospital in Edgbaston. Let our guests get all they can pack and escort them out.” She says with a wicked grin. “I’ll tell the others to hold fire until they clear off.” She’s dazzlingly pretty, now that I look better. Leggy and willowy, with gleaming amber eyes. She catches my stare, and smiles. “Want to come over to our place? You can rejoin your party on the way back.”

I consider the tempting offer. I’m used to the Raptors, not to street hoodlums with stunning bodies. Jack says nothing, but something wary in Ethan’s eyes makes me think again. “No, thanks. We prefer staying all together.”

“You don’t know what you’re missing.”

I sure get a fair picture. I’d better leave before I change my mind.

The girl and the other boy walk away, while the one named Shelby remains with us. He’s our age or younger, and, from Jack’s admired stare, I can see she finds him sort of cute. I wonder the hell why. That waxen-faced dickhead with pale green eyes doesn’t look appealing to me. But girl I’m not. Thinking better, maybe that’s why she has not objected when the hot babe wanted to snatch me away. Great. I decide to pay them no attention.

We walk for a fair while, and finally reach the hospital, deserted and derelict as the rest of the town. We’re damn lucky it’s in working conditions. Facilities of the old days. Civilisation here may well be a memory of the past, but electricity still works.

We check the area and prepare for the night. Shelby boy is quiet, speaking exclusively to Jack, who seems appreciating his conversation. A tad too much for my own taste. But I’m tired, and when they go outside to smoke after dinner, I don’t object.

When I get up in the morning everybody seems busy with a purpose. Ethan is listing supplies, while the boy and Jack are fixing breakfast. I sit nearby, taking a cup of coffee. “Hello guys – you had good night?”

Shelby nods and drinks his tea, while Jack smiles. “Hi, Norman. Everything’s fine here.”

Her eyes however suggest otherwise. And the way he touches her arm makes me think something happened last night. But it’s only a fleeting moment. Maybe I’m just jealous.

Shelby stands up. “I’m done here.”

“Yes?” Ethan says, looking at him with an unreadable expression.

“Yes. Tomorrow I’ll come and walk you out.” His backpack on his shoulders and his rifle in his hand he leaves quickly, while Jack follows him with a disturbingly wistful stare.

*****

We spend the day packing what we can. I observe Jack. She’s weird, but maybe it’s just my impression. However, when at night she comes on to me, I decide it’s not just an impression. She undresses and remains stark naked – her pale skin shining in the moonlight. “What are you doing, Jack?”

She takes my hand and put it on her breast. “I’m ready, Norman – let’s do it.”

Uh-oh. “What’s up? Raptors haven’t drunk me dry yet.”

“I’m serious.” She hugs me and takes out my shirt. I should be excited, but I’m not. There’s something that makes my hackles spike up like a frightened cat.

A sudden noise disrupts this intimate moment, making her jump.

“Norman, you need to come with me.”

We turn toward the entrance. Ethan is there, rifle ready to shoot. We both look at him amazed. Jack reacts first, covering her body best as she can. “You wanker -go away.”

“Now, Norman.”

There’s urgency in his eyes and a concern I have never seen before. I step back.

“Where are you going?” Jack looks alarmed, her eyes wide-open. “I was right, you’re a damn faggot.”

I don’t reply. I follow Ethan outside.

“We’re going to sleep here in the lobby.” He says, handing me a sleeping bag. “Nobody can access the storage room from here without hitting us first.” He says slowly, reading my thoughts. Jack is going to be safe there, alone or not. I could ask for explanations, but I’m not sure I want to know. And something tells me the night won’t be boring.

I hate to be right. Only a couple of hours have passed, when we hear noises. Actually, footsteps. Ethan loads his rifle. After a few moments, we see Shelby heading toward us, while I hear Jack coming out from the storage room and slowly walking into our direction.

He looks at us, and then looks at her, smiling. “Games are over.”

“What the hell are you talking about?” I don’t like his grin, that strange light in his eyes.

“She didn’t she tell you.”

“Tell me what?”

“About us.”

“About…the two of you?”

“No. About all of us. Including you.” He says, and I notice his eyes are dangerously bluish in the low light of the lobby. “Have you ever wondered how the Raptors could possibly be in control of such extensive territories after all these years? How they could keep going on and on and on after generations? They’ve been almost hunted down in Europe after the first wave, and exterminated; yet, they have managed to provoke the Second Escape. What do you think they are, fucking immortals? I’ll tell you how.” He takes a step in my direction. “They’ve learnt, asshole. They might have forgotten how to speak, but they still communicate, and exchange information. And in this evolutionary process, they learnt how to reproduce. How? They use us for it. Infected people but still humans, able to breed and transmit the virus. Spreading Andromeda to as many other humans as they can. Until, one day, we fully convert too. The Raptors are creating a new species, stronger than any human, or animal, can ever be. Like viruses can’t survive without their hosts and learn how to keep them alive, they hunt and capture us to spread their DNA, produce new specimen and keep going. The new Master Race, the one that will eventually inherit this world. Here, in Europe.

“The centre of world renaissance.” Ethan says coldly. “Once again.”

“Yes – an entire new world.” Shelby laughs. “Humans don’t stand a chance, and you should be grateful for the membership ticket. You’re part of the elite now.”

Jack starts crying, but Ethan has his own way to thank him for the offer. He shoots him right in his head. We look at the body on the ground. Yes, he had blue shades in his eyes. But human he was. He spoke, too. “He doesn’t seem one of them. Maybe he was just high.”

“Maybe.” Ethan starts checking him out.

“Norman I’m so sorry, so sorry….” Jack is on her knees, crying. “You may think this is why I’ve approached you last night. But I had no idea.”

“I believe you.” I do, really. “And I don’t believe his story. Andromeda turns people into monsters in a matter of hours. And was never sexually transmitted anyway. This boy was not infected.”

“Wrong.” Ethan loses no time in volunteering details. He starts rummaging into his backpack. Out there, in the countryside, the only way to tell if you’re infected is by using leeches. They react with disgust to the virus, and this is why everybody grows them as pets. But here we’re in a hospital and more sophisticated methods are available.

He tosses Jack a testing kit. “Do it yourself.”

“And then what? You will kill me if I test positive?”

“Do it.”

“Answer me, you Chinese half-blood. You think I don’t know where you come from? You bastards have killed your own people in thousands.”

He smiles to her. A suave smile. Then he raises his gun and points it at her face. “Good. I haven’t to explain you how I deal with Andromeda. Now give me a reason to keep you alive.”

She turns to me, her eyes brimming with tears. “How can you let him threatening me like that?”

“He’s right, Jack. If you’re infected we can’t bring you back to the children. Test yourself.”

Resigned, she does it. She inserts the testing unit on her forearm while she winces in pain, and she closes her eyes. There are a few seconds of silence. She looks at it – an allergic reaction’s already there – and starts crying again. Then she turns toward Ethan in anger. I see his eyes squinting and I know he’s going to fire. No. If somebody has to kill Jack, it has to be me. I raise my crossbow and I shoot straight into her heart.

Silence. Doom. Fucking white moon shining outside, nowhere as white as my girl’s sleek skin.

I’m still observing her in a sort of reverie when we hear a familiar noise. They’re coming. Hunting time.

*****

The sun is rising. We walk into the desert road that takes us away from Birmingham. We have not spoken since the carnage at the hospital. Because carnage is what it has been.

They were there, blocking our way out of the building. Most of them not older than twenty, and humans. Only their corneas were too bluish and their movements too feverish. But they didn’t screech – they swore like Jack and I in our most inspired days. I keep telling myself they were Raptors like the others, in another form but even more dangerous, if possible. I can close my eyes and see again, as in a nightmare too vivid, my parents ripped apart by those who have announced themselves as the new master species: and I hate them. But the truth is, what I’ve just killed were not famished monsters. They were boys like me, children of the same Apocalypse, but not as lucky: no Ethan around to save their ass. And I’ve butchered them.

My throat feels dry – those images are dancing in front of my eyes like transparent butterflies.

The blood flowing away from their wounds, their screams and my rage. Ethan shoots them down with the precision of a sniper. His eyes are cold, and his hand never waves. I shiver, and need to adjust my target more than once – and yet, my crossbow is as deadly.  I slaughter the hot babe, when she attacks me; I jab a wooden arrow in one of her pretty eyes, that will never be pretty again. And even when I start having enough of all that blood, and tears run down my cheeks, I keep going, slashing their necks, looking at their bluish corneas and repeating myself – hunting is my life, this is what I have to do. Killing, killing, killing.

The howl of a dog gets me back to the present moment.

Ethan is looking at his compass, he doesn’t trust anything else, and certainly not GPS.  Things look not that good. We’re covered in blood. We can only hope we don’t have scratches. We make a stop into the first canal we encounter on the way out. We strip down naked and we wash ourselves in the water with bleach and iodine. Then we test ourselves, just to make sure not to carry any infection back to camp. I give Ethan a sidelong glance. He’s even quieter since we have left, looking tired and worn out. I suddenly remember our conversation the first night we arrived in Birmingham. “Ethan, did you know it? I mean … Shelby’s story.”

“Yes. I heard rumours. But I wasn’t sure. Not until tonight.” He stares at me with his almond-shaped eyes.  “Hong Kong, three years ago. We had an outbreak – one of the many. One of my baby brothers got left behind, and survived. We believed he had got away. But he had not. He kept a human shape for one year, without showing any symptom. I guess this is how they started mutating, the Raptors. It hasn’t happened in a day, and what we see yesterday are the results of that evolution.” He lowers his voice. “My brother…he infected our mother, his twin and my little sister too. I had to take them out.” He finishes suiting up. “We could not understand. It was nothing we had ever seen before. I was a biochemistry student at the time, volunteering in a crisis unit. After that, I decided to travel to Europe and search for evidence that ours was not an isolated case and we were indeed facing something new.”

“I don’t understand. The Raptors – they’re not even able to talk.“

“Do bees or termites talk? This doesn’t prevent them to build huge structures and develop complex societies. I guess we are witnessing an admirable example of swarm intelligence applied to a new human species. They adapt and evolve, learning what once made us a winning species.” He smiles, a dark hue in his eyes. “Maybe this is mother nature protecting herself. This new version is certainly less harmful for the rest of the species of this planet, considering that it only consumes the previous one. It doesn’t need to slaughter anything else on its path to supremacy.”

“What are you going to do?”

“Alert homebase. Send my report over. Prepare for counterattack. Go hunting them, before it is too late.” He loads his rifle, smiling at me. “And taking these supplies back to camp.”

 

END.

By Russell Hemmell