Read The Left Series (Book 4): Left In The Cold Online

Authors: Christian Fletcher

Tags: #Zombie Apocalypse

The Left Series (Book 4): Left In The Cold (35 page)

BOOK: The Left Series (Book 4): Left In The Cold
8.84Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

The passageway leading to the back entrance stood around twenty yards from my position. Twenty yards didn’t seem like much of a distance but I was surrounded by hungry zombies, a raging fire and
had a blood thirsty gunman to contend with.

My eyes stung and tears rolled down my cheeks. I coughed and retched, the smoke was becoming unbearable. Alex obviously also decided he had to get out of the room. He swung the shotgun around his head and backed up towards the passageway.
The zombies surrounding him grasped at his clothing. I could see he was surrounded and fired off a couple of shots, trying to clear a path for him. Two more burning ghouls came at me and I had to switch my aim. I fired twice and the attacking zombies went down.

A male ghoul, who smoldered in the heat, grabbed Alex from behind and bit into the nape of his neck. Alex screamed in pain and rocked his head backwards. The zombies closed in and pulled him down to the floor. The flames burnt around the huddle of undead but the scorching heat didn’t deter them. Rotten hands pulled and tore at Alex’s flesh, ripping into his guts and biting into his face. The flames engulfed the tangled mass of feeding bodies and I lost sight of Alex but could still hear his agonized screams.

“Alex…Alex? Are you all right?” Davie yelled from the balcony. His view was obviously obscured by the smoke and flames and he hadn’t seen Alex go down.

I had to make a run for it
immediately; I couldn’t delay my exit any longer. I crouched down, focusing on the passageway on the opposite side of the room. Sweat ran down my back and chest and ran from my face in streams. I broke from my cover, sprinting across the floor space and dodging between the burning zombies like a wide receiver in a game of American Football.

Davie saw me bolt from my hiding place and fired off a burst at me. I heard the rounds thud into the burning floorboards behind me and I twisted and fired off a few shots with my handgun, trying to give myself some cover and enough time to reach the passageway.
My shots went way too high, dislodging the plaster above Davie’s head. I saw him instinctively duck down, the M-16 jerked awkwardly in his hands and the barrel pointed towards the ceiling. I was going to make it to the passageway. It would only take me a few more seconds before I’d bundle through that narrow corridor.

I was too busy focusing on Davie on the balcony and the corridor entrance to notice
a burning hand, trailing across the floor as I moved by the zombies feeding on Alex’s corpse. The hand clasped around my right ankle, the bony fingers digging into my flesh. My momentum caused my body to keep going forward and my legs to stay still. I tumbled onto the floorboards, with flames roaring all around me. The jarring motion of the fall caused me to drop the M-9 and the gun slid away from me. I cried out in pain as the rucksack strap dug into my wounded shoulder.

I lay on the floor for a second, realizing I had to get myself together. I felt the heat of the flames wrap around me as I kicked out at the grasping hand around my ankle. The ghoul pulled himself across the floor, using my leg as leverage. The smoldering hairless head, moved closer to my leg. The zombie’s skin on his face blistered and pulsed under the heat. I twisted around and kicked out, catching the ghoul underneath the chin with the toe of my left boot. The creature’s head rocked back
and I jammed the heel of my left foot down on its wrist of the hand that gripped my right ankle. I heard a snapping sound as the bones broke in the zombie’s arm. Shuffling backwards in a sitting position, I kicked the creeping zombie away from me.

I
frantically searched around the floor for my handgun but saw it was right in the center of a cluster of flames, a few feet to my right. I tried to retrieve it but the flames were too damn hot, stinging my fingers as I dabbed my hand into the fire.

“Time to die, motherfucker,” Davie roared from the balcony.

I glanced upward and saw him aiming the M-16 directly at my head.

 

 

 

Chapter Fifty

 

I should have tried to get to my feet or roll over to get out of the line of fire. But I didn’t. I sat frozen in the same spot, amongst the flames gazing up at Davie, waiting to be shot in the head. My life didn’t flash before me nor did I see jerky images of my past life. I simply felt nothing, almost a calmness.

Davie was so consumed with his burning desire to shoot me
dead, he didn’t notice the three zombies closing in on him on the balcony. Two of the undead approached him from his left side and one from the right. I think it was the first time since the apocalypse that I’d been glad to see some zombies. His smug grin immediately slipped from his face when the ghouls grabbed hold of him from each side. Davie fired the M-16 but the rounds went high above my head and off to my right. He struggled against the zombie’s clutches but couldn’t prevent the third one from tearing the band aid off his cheek and biting into the bloody wound. Davie screamed as he wrestled with the three zombies but they took more bites out of his face and neck.

A burning sensation shook me from watching the bizarre scene on the balcony and I looked down to see my combat fatigues
smoldering with a few small flames flapping around my shins. I flapped at the flames with my arm but the sleeve of my parker jacket only also caught fire.

“Shit,” I roared, trying to scrabble to my feet.

A flaming ghoul hissed at me as I stood up. The undead woman was only a few inches away from me and more closed in. I shoved the burning woman away from me, aware my clothing was smoking and smoldering and burning in places. The floorboards gave way beneath my left foot and I nearly fell again. I regained my footing and stumbled towards the passageway. More ghouls tried to grab me as I headed for the corridor. An arch of flames burned around the entranceway and the heat was becoming overbearing.

I ducked down and rushed for the corridor, smacking away burning, grasping hands as I moved.
The air in the corridor was cooler but was heavily fogged by choking smoke. I coughed violently and walked into a wall as the corridor dog legged. I couldn’t see where I was supposed to be heading in the darkness and I held my hand over my mouth and nose, in an attempt to filter away some of the smoke. Three zombies followed me into the corridor, reaching out with their arms ablaze. Their burning bodies lit up the passageway slightly and I saw the path right-angled to my right.

I quickly fished around in my jacket pocket and pulled out my flashlight. The zombies staggered closer but they were the least of my worries. I turned and rushed along the corridor, not recognizing the route at all.
A blast of cold air rushed against my face and I hoped I was heading in the right direction. I was disorientated and I could only see about two feet in front of me with the light from the flashlight. The hazy smog drifted through the whole corridor, sucked towards the fresh air from outside. Cordoba and the others must have left the back door open when they exited the building, which was acting like a huge extraction fan. At least they’d made it outside.

I leaned into the wall, sliding along it as I stumbled forward. The zombies still moaned behind me, burning but still in pursuit. My clothing still smoldered but the flames seemed to have gone out when I flapped at them.

I glanced into empty, dark rooms either side of the corridor, checking to see if any zombies were poised to spring out on me, not to mention Maddie. I was still unsure of her whereabouts and wouldn’t put it past her to attempt a last ditch attack. The corridor dog legged to the left and I finally saw the rear entrance, leading out to the courtyard.  The door stood wide open and smoke billowed out into the night. I felt the rush of cold air from outside and it cooled the sweat running down my face.

I hurried outside and immediately
slowly lay down and rolled in the snow, cooling my body and my smoldering clothing. I heard moans and groans from across the courtyard and shone the flashlight around. A bunch of undead lurched out of the darkness into the light beam and I saw the rear gate had also been left open. Maybe Cordoba and the others had thought leaving all the access doors open would help me escape but in reality, it had turned out to be a hindrance. More zombies from outside the castle grounds bundled through the open gate and lurched across the courtyard towards the castle.

A few zombies had spotted me and stumbled in my direction. I hauled myself up, put the flashlight back in my jacket pocket
and pulled the rifle off my shoulder. I changed the magazine as I knew I didn’t have many rounds left in the old one. My goal now was to get by the zombies in the courtyard and make it to the golf clubhouse, to meet up with the others.

The M-16 was still in ‘
single shot
’ mode and I knew I was going to have to pick my shots carefully. Every round had to count as a kill shot if I was going to get out of that gateway. Reloading magazines was going to be time consuming and awkward in the darkness. The full moon provided just enough light to see what I was doing I couldn’t allow the undead to get too close.

Walking towards the gate at a brisk pace, I held the rifle to my shoulder and aimed at the approaching zombie’s heads. I fired at each one when they were around six feet away from me, checking behind me every couple of seconds to make sure I wasn’t being surrounded. I only took out the zombies directly in front of me, clearing a path to the gateway.

I must have fired at least twenty shots by the time I stepped through the entranceway in the castle’s outer wall. How different the circumstances were when Batfish and I had been saved by Alex and entered the castle grounds through the same gateway a couple of days earlier. As usual, the situation had rapidly deteriorated into total chaos. Maybe we were simply cursed by bad fortune. Was it the ultimate penalty we paid for remaining alive, when so many had already perished? Perhaps we were destined to suffer because we weren’t supposed to survive. Maybe Mother Nature purged the planet of the human race for a purpose and she was doing her best to ensure the remaining few didn’t start repopulating again.

The rear castle perimeter wall cast me in dark shadow as I moved out of the grounds.
I turned right and kept moving at a speedy pace, not wanting the zombies in the courtyard behind me to catch me up. I had to pull out my flashlight again to see where the hell I was going. It wasn’t ideal as the light would act like a beacon to the zombies still milling around behind the castle. My M-16 didn’t have a flashlight attachment so holding both the flashlight and the rifle in each hand would affect my aim.

Luckily for me, most of the undead had thinned in number around the back of the castle grounds and I guessed most of them had found their way into the perimeter by now. A couple of stragglers loomed into my path but I quickly dispatched them with carefully aimed headshots. I had to stop and fire, resting the M-16 barrel on my left forearm whilst shining the flashlight at the target.

I turned the corner around the castle wall and the landscape fanned out in a large expanse of white snow across the ground. I moved away from the confining shadows of the wall and turned out the flashlight. The golf clubhouse was visible in the distance and I started a slow jog towards it. The odd zombie stumbled around in the snow, making their way to the front of the castle but I easily evaded their clutches. I sincerely hoped the others had made it to the clubhouse and hadn’t seen any evidence to prove otherwise. I hadn’t seen any huddles of zombies feeding over human remains or any blood stains in the snow.

I bounded through the drifts, desperate to rest and drink some water to quench my thirst and relieve my parched, smoke
-dried throat.

The clubhouse was only around fifty yards away when I heard a shout behind me. I turned around but couldn’t see anybody at first. The fire inside the castle continued to rage through the interior and the orange glow lit up the night sky as the flames spread throughout the building. I saw smoke billowing from the tower windows and from under the roof tiles.

A female figure emerged from a small clump of trees between the castle and where I stood. It wasn’t Cordoba, Batfish or Wingate. It was Maddie. The last surviving member of our enemy. I raised my M-16 and aimed straight at her chest. I wasn’t taking any chances. She raised her hands to show she was unarmed and started walking through the snow towards me.

“Thank God you made it out of there alive, Brett,” she called
out.

I scanned the landscape and a few straggling zombies lumbered in our direction but they were far enough away not to cause a problem. Most of the undead were either inside the castle or shuffled towards the open entrance, seemingly captivated by the light of the flames spreading rapidly through the building.

“That fire is going to burn the castle to the ground and all those zombies in there…shit, it’s a miracle we survived,” she said, shaking her head as she approached me.

I warily watched her come closer. She had a beaming smile on her face as though we were old friends meeting up after a long absence. The girl was very strange and the previous altercation seemed to have slipped her mind. I debated whether to simply shoot her or let her approach.

“Ah, Brett, I’m so glad we both survived,” she sighed. “I’m so looking forward to our future together.”

The woman was delusional. All her recent activities seemed to be lost and forgotten about in her warped mind.

BOOK: The Left Series (Book 4): Left In The Cold
8.84Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Krewe of Hunters The Unseen by Heather Graham
Can't Say No by Sherryl Woods
Barbarian's Mate by Ruby Dixon
The Head of the Saint by Socorro Acioli
The Suitors by Cecile David-Weill
Wild Card by Lisa Shearin
Layers Peeled by Lacey Silks
The Measure of the Magic by Terry Brooks