Star Drawn Saga (Book 2): Lost Among The Dead (4 page)

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Authors: Stephen Charlick

Tags: #Zombie Apocalypse

BOOK: Star Drawn Saga (Book 2): Lost Among The Dead
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Daddy,
’ giggled his youngest daughter, abruptly shaking the image of broken windows and blood splatted wallpaper from his mind, ‘
they’re almost here, they’re almost here!

At first the voices of his lost wife and daughters would come to him in fleeting and ghostly murmurs; their demands for retribution pleading and forlorn. Yet as time passed and Tom’s grief twisted and morphed into something hard and concrete within him, their anger at his own survival seeming to grow, placing him in more and more danger; and then soon their very presence became a real and an almost tangible thing to him. Ghostly forms seemed to forever linger just beyond his line of sight, constantly whispering to him while childlike spectral fingers would briefly brush again his hand or tentatively cling to the back of his jacket like a child hiding shyly behind him, afraid to show itself. Even now he would swear he could hear the footsteps of his daughters as they danced back and forth, excitedly awaiting the carnage yet to come. But he knew should he turn he would see nothing; nothing but the room behind him, as empty and as barren as his own meaningless life.

A more rational mind would recognize this as purely the result of ‘survival guilt’ but with his blindfold of grief welcomingly wrapped about him, Tom simply could not see this. He merely paid penance for failing his family when they needed him most and it was a penance he knew he would one day pay with his life.


Open the door, Tom. Open it and be done with it!
’ urged his wife, her presence so real he would swear he could feel her wraithlike lips brushing against his ear as she spoke.

‘Carol,’ he tried to protest, his knuckles turning white as his fists tightened about the handles of the curved blades he held in each hand. ‘I… I can’t… Fran and… and…K’


Let those rotting bastards in and make them pay
,’ she continued, ignoring his refusal, demanding it was she that commanded his sole attention and concern.

It was at that moment that the sound of splintering wood filled the room, cutting off his wife’s plea to send a sliver of ice-cold reality shooting through Tom, chilling him to his very core.


The door, Daddy, they’re getting through!
’ cried his eldest daughter, promptly pulling him back to his ethereal world just as the top panel of the door in front of him splint and cracked under the continual onslaught from the hungry Dead in the hallway.

Almost instantly, Tom saw the blackened and filthy fingers fighting with each other to force their way through the ever widening crack. So desperate were these cadavers to get through to the living flesh they knew lurked just beyond their grasp, that with each finger that pushed its way forth, decaying skin was sliced from bony claw-like hands sending rotting flesh falling unnoticed to the floor and with it the crack grew ominously larger. Behind him, Tom’s consciousness vaguely registered Kai calling to Fran, the young man’s voice dreamlike and distant to him, as if spoken far off or merely imagined.


Destroy them for us,
’ hissed Tom’s wife, as if sensing his attention wondering. ‘
Do it, Tom! Do it!

Just then the top of the bedroom door bent inward, creaking alarmingly as it moved and then, unable to withstand the pressure being forced against it any longer, the whole top panel suddenly shattered sending splinters of wood showering into the room.


Do it!
’ Tom’s wife almost screamed in a voice only he could hear.

‘Come on then!’ shouted Tom, at last allowing the rage of his grief to consume him just as the decayed face of a Dead woman pushed its way forward past the grasping hands of its Dead comrades to leer hungrily at him. ‘Come on, you Dead fuckers! Come and get some!’

***

From the noise above her Fran knew what little time they had left was running out fast, so with the rough bark of the tree trunk at her back and her feet resting on two lower branches for support, she slowly reached down and slipped free the sharp hunting knife from the sheath tied to her ankle.

‘Right,’ she muttered to herself, just as her eyes locked with the pair of milky film-covered eyes staring up at her, ‘time for someone to meet his maker.’

Pausing, Fran’s eyes followed her route from branch to branch, down the tree into the tall overgrown grasses at its base and the Dead man eagerly awaiting her. As always she couldn’t help but visualize each twist, turn and movement she would need to make to ensure the outcome she wanted, it was an inbuilt trait; a trait that had saved her life on many an occasion.

‘Come on, Frannie,
’ she remembered her Father’s coaching before one of her Judo matches many years ago, ‘
plan your attack. Only when you can see it, that’s when you then act, girl… come on, you can do this.’

With a smile tinged with loss twitching at her lips, Fran briefly pictured her Father, his proud face erupting in jubilant smiles as she ran towards him, the first of many first place medals clutched in her hand.

‘I can do this,’ she murmured, carefully placing the knife between her teeth before pushing herself away from the tree trunk to duck down into a crouch; her weight spread between two thick gnarled branches.

She was about to move across and down to the next planned position when she happened to glance through the thinning canopy of golden brown leaves around her and out to the lane beyond the garden surrounding them; what she saw made her pause. For there just on the other side of an expanse of wild brambles, the last of their harvest hanging heavy and uncollected, was the disturbing shape of an overturned and badly charred cart.

‘Shit!’ she spat around the blade in her mouth, noticing the partly burnt carcass of a horse lying on its side and the two small dogs hungrily ripping at its flanks.

As she spoke one of the dogs, a small Fox Terrier, filthy with matted and gore-caked fur, looked up from its meal of horse meat and let out a brief high pitched bark. Whether it recognised her as alive or was simply warning her off his meal, she didn’t know but no sooner had their eyes met than the animal turned its back on her, instantly dismissing her to continue feeding.


Thank God
,’ she thought to herself, realizing from the colouring of what was left of the poor beast’s skin that it couldn’t have been Star. ‘
Hope you two are on your own
,’ she continued, giving the dogs a final concerned glance before deftly lowering herself down to the next branch. ‘
Last thing we need is a pack of feral dogs adding to this mix of crap
.’

She had heard tales of these feral packs; they were savage, wild and unpredictable. Made up of a mismatch of long abandoned pets and mongrel new-borns, these animals had fallen back into a wolf-like existence and embraced that which had lay hidden deep within their genetic memory, they had abandoned their former title as ‘man’s best friend’ to carve out a new position in this new world of the Dead. Everything was fair game to them now. To them flesh was flesh, even that of their former masters; alive or Dead.

‘I know, I know,’ she muttered through gritted teeth, as the Dead man beat his putrid hands against the tree trunk below her; a desperate and pitiful moaning escaping his blackened cracked lips. ‘I’m coming, don’t you worry.’

Within seconds she made good on her promise and was sat perched on the lowest of the branches, just barely out of the Dead man’s reach. Looking down at it, she tried not to think of whom he had once been; what hopes, dreams or loves this man may have once had. She had but one thought in her mind, to end its unnatural existence as quickly as possible so she could get to their cart before any more of the Dead heard the commotion and came to investigate. And so with her knife once again firmly in her grasp, she waited for just the right moment to present itself and then, with her Father’s words of encouragement flitting through her mind, she let herself drop. Almost immediately she found herself in the tall grass astride the Dead man’s struggling corpse; the wiry tendons of its neck stretching beneath mould tinged skin as it strained to reach her with its snapping tombstone-like teeth.

‘No, you… don’t!’ she grunted, gripping the cadaver firmly under its chin and yanking its head sharply to one side. ‘Shit!’ she continued, suddenly realizing the corpse’s movements and her tight handhold were causing the rotting skin covering its rancid flesh to slough and tear beneath her fingers.

Knowing she was about to lose her grip, she quickly stabbed down with her knife, piercing the skull around the ear canal, ripping through the brain tissue beneath. With a wet ‘cracking’ sound Fran knew the job was done.

‘Wow!’ she coughed, suddenly covering her nose with the crook of her elbow as the corpse shuddered and then became still between her legs; the stench erupting from it turning her stomach. ‘You’d better hope there’s no door policy at those Pearly gates, man, because…’

She was about to continue when a shadow fell across the lifeless cadaver’s face.

‘Oh crap!’ sighed Fran, looking up to see the body of what appeared to have once been a ten year old boy stumbling silently towards her through the tall grass; the missing lower jaw and absent tongue making it impossible for it to vocalize the hungry excitement that burned within its milky stare.

Jumping to her feet, Fran ripped her knife from the now motionless cadaver’s skull, the sucking sound as she pulled the blade free a sickening precursor to the splatter of rancid brain matter that followed in its wake.

‘Great,’ she muttered, flicking her wrist to remove a stubborn blob of purple-tinged gore from the groove running the length of the blade.

Even as the offending gobbet of matter dislodged itself to fall to her feet, Fran knew it had been a pointless exercise for already the Dead boy’s arms were reaching for her beseechingly, as if begging for the merest taste, and she knew her blade would once again be dipping into the usual well of rotting flesh and putrid fluids.

‘Come on then,’ she murmured, stepping over the lifeless body at her feet to grab hold of one of the Dead boy’s outstretched wrists.

With a sharp tug, she abruptly pulled the boy’s body towards her, knocking him off balance before easily sidestepping him and tossing his skeletal and abused remains to the ground.

‘I haven’t got time for this,’ she said to herself, trying in vain to ignore Tom’s shouts from above her as she quickly placed her foot on the back of the boy’s emaciated neck, the pressure easily keeping him in place.

The Dead boy clawed uselessly at the ground, jerking his head back and forth, oblivious to the tearing of its skin and cracking of delicate neck vertebrae beneath Fran’s foothold. Sure that the creature was now pinned securely beneath her foot she swiftly leant forward and with one sharp stabbing motion aimed at the relatively thinner bone at the base of its skull, her knife at last gave the child’s corpse the gift of true death.


I’m sorry… rest in peace
,’ she found herself fleetingly thinking, as she coolly pulled her blade free from the small skull and ran to the side of the house; leaving the two bodies lying forever motionless behind her in the tall grass at the base of the tree.

Pressing her back against rough brickwork, she began to edge her way to the corner of the house, crushing overgrown and weed-choked flowerbeds beneath her feet as she went. As she came to one of the ground floor windows, its shutters hanging loose, pealing and dilapidated after years of neglect, she paused wary of passing directly in front of it; after all the last thing she needed was a Dead horde rushing the dirt streaked glass if they caught sight of her. But with a large thorny rose bush growing beneath the windowsill preventing her from ducking completely from sight she knew she had only one choice; she’d just have to chance it.


Well, here goes nothing,
’ she thought, dropping down as far as the expansive rose bush would allow before darting across.

Sparing a brief glance into the forlorn looking room as she sped past, Fran couldn’t help but notice the rust-brown splashes and handprints that littered the walls inside. Instantly she recognized them for what they were, for these were the calling card of the Dead and dying; and it had happened within the last week or two, judging from their colouring.


The cart,’
she thought to herself, realising whoever had been in the burnt cart had probably sought sanctuary in the house after their accident only to later succumb to injury or find themselves being overrun by the Dead just like now. ‘
Idiots

we should have made time to look around properly last night,
’ she continued, berating herself that they had prioritised getting out of the storm and starting a warm fire over doing a more thorough search of the area first. ‘
Won’t make that mistake again… that is if we’re not ripped to pieces
.’

Forced to now edge herself between the house and a huge Rhododendron bush that blocked her progress, her back scraping painfully against the brickwork as she went, Fran slowly made her way beyond the corner of the building and found herself in a shadowy corner of the front garden.

‘Shit!’ she spat, noticing the corpse of a Dead woman dragging itself along the garden path towards the front door; the excited calls of its compatriots in death adding determination to its painfully slow and awkward movements.

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