Thirteen Roses Book One: Before: An Apocalyptic Zombie Saga

Read Thirteen Roses Book One: Before: An Apocalyptic Zombie Saga Online

Authors: Michael Cairns

Tags: #Paranormal, #Zombies

BOOK: Thirteen Roses Book One: Before: An Apocalyptic Zombie Saga
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Contents

Title

Publishing

Mailing List

Dedication

Intro

David pt 1

David pt 2

David pt 3

Interlude

Bayleigh pt 1

Bayleigh pt 2

Interlude

Krystal pt 1

Krystal pt 2

Krystal pt 3

Interlude

Jackson pt 1

Interlude

Jackson pt 2

Interlude

Sam pt 1

Sam pt 2

Interlude

Alex pt 1

Alex pt 2

Interlude

Interlude pt 2

Taylor pt 1

Taylor pt 2

Interlude

Luke - Monday - 10 Days to Plague Day

Alex - Tuesday - 9 Days to Plague Day

David - Thursday - Plague Day

Bayleigh - Thursday - Plague Day

Luke - Wednesday - 8 Days to Plague Day

Jackson - Thursday - Plague Day

Krystal - Thursday - Plague Day

Luke - Thursday - 7 Days to Plague Day

David - Thursday - Plague Day

Bayleigh - Thursday - Plague Day

Jackson - Thursday - Plague Day

Alex - Thursday - 6 Days to Plague Day

Krystal - Thursday - Plague Day

David - Thursday - Plague Day

Luke - Friday - 6 Days to Plague Day

Bayleigh - Thursday - Plague Day

Krystal - Thursday - Plague Day

Alex - Friday - 6 Days to Plague Day

David - Thursday - Plague Day

Bayleigh - Thursday - Plague Day

Luke - Friday - 6 Days to Plague Day

Krystal - Thursday - Plague Day

David - Thursday - Plague Day

Alex - Saturday - 5 Days to Plague Day

Steph - Thursday - Plague Day

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Acknowledgements

Thirteen Roses

An Apocalyptic Zombie Fable

Book One: Before

by

Michael Cairns

Published by Cairns Publishing

Copyright © Michael Cairns (2014)
 

All rights reserved. No part of this publication
 

may be reproduced, distributed, or
 

transmitted in any form or by any means without the
 

prior written permission of the publisher.
 

1
st
Edition

To get a free book, free short stories and updates on upcoming releases,
 

JOIN MY MAILING LIST!

For Elyan. I know you'll want to read it one day. Just not yet.
 

Intro

The flower seller strolled from the station and out onto Embankment. The sun was out today and he hunched his shoulders. It wouldn't do any good, but his hands were full. Eyes scrunched almost shut, he found his usual spot at the bottom of the stairs and spread out his wares.
 

On first inspection, he was a very normal man. A shaved head, a pair of deep set, dark brown eyes, a nose that could kindly be described as large and a thin mouth. His lips were pressed together as though in disapproval. He was average build and average height and his physique was buried beneath a large bomber jacket that kept out the morning wind racing up the Thames.
 

However, looking a little longer and more carefully, one might begin to see things that weren't quite so average. His skin moved as though ants crawled just below the surface. With every move his body made, it shifted and sighed, like sand spread by the wind. His eyes weren't actually dark brown. They were flecked, tiny yellow sparks that winked in and out like stars. Catch him at the right time, in the right light, and his eyes were golden.
 

But the most striking thing about him was the presence of two growths. They were small, small enough to go unnoticed by most, pressing against the skin on either side of his head, just above the ears. But one would have to look close and scrutinise. And there was something about him that discouraged scrutiny.
 

The city was quietest at this time. The early commuters marched, slouched and crept from the tube, eyes invariably glued to phones or the floor. So it was that no one saw the table emerge from his jacket, or the flowers that followed it, bunch after bunch from a seemingly empty rain coat. Within minutes the table was heaving with a spread of the most beautiful flowers, perfectly in bloom and wrapped in delicate white paper.
 

No water from the tubs in which they stood marred the paper. Not one petal was out of place. The flower seller picked and poked until he was happy, then settled his back against the rail at the bottom of the stairs and let out a long breath.
 

The herd of commuters thickened and bustled and ignored. They barely saw the roses and chrysanthemums, the tulips and lilies. Had you watched the flower seller, you might have seen his eyes follow first one then another. They lingered here and there, tracing the steps of a woman in a grey suit before jumping to a jogger clad in green sweat pants and t-shirt.
 

Had you looked even closer, you might have seen his eyes despair again and again. You might have seen the smile that seemed permanently fixed to his face droop now and then. Then again, you might have just seen a flower seller, waiting patiently for his first customer of the day.
 

He would only have one. He only ever had one. Today, it would be David.
 

David Part One

The only thing worse than the shower being crap was the freezing cold bathroom he had to step into once he was done. He didn't have to put up with this at Steph's. She had the most amazing shower and towels thick enough to bury yourself in.
 

Today, he would do it today. It wouldn't be that difficult, not really. They'd barely spoken in the last few months, it wouldn't come as a surprise. He towelled himself as quickly as he could, shivering as he did the one-legged dance of drying. Content he wasn't about to freeze to death, he wrapped himself tight in his robe and sneaked into his study.
 

Amber was still asleep. She used to get up and have breakfast with him. They'd drink tea and talk about the day ahead and he'd leave with a kiss and sometimes a pat on the bottom, and his heart would carry him on wings to the station. His lip curled as he unlocked the top drawer of his desk.
 

The envelope lay where he'd left it, the solicitor's name printed neatly in one corner. Every day he didn't press ahead with this meant another day of coming home to misery and another day of not knowing whether he'd see Steph. Why didn't he just do it?

He'd take the papers to work. He could check them one more time and have them ready when he arrived home. They could sit at the table they bought together from Cargo, giggling about spending more money on a table than their first car. And he'd explain that this was it and she didn't have to put up with him anymore and all she had to do was sign, sign and sign.
 

He slipped the papers into his bag and headed downstairs. Cornflakes. Bloody cornflakes. Was it so difficult to learn how little he liked cornflakes? They'd been married eight years and still she bought cornflakes. He hissed, shoved them down his throat as fast as possible and headed for the station.
 

He sent Steph a text on the way.
 

Hey sexy, what you wearing?

Moments later, his phone buzzed. It was like she was waiting for him.
 

Granny pants and pyjamas. I am the queen of hotness x

Why does that image give me a hard-on?

Because you're a weirdo. And because I've got that quarter cup bra you got me on underneath. You coming over today?

He stopped and adjusted his trousers, coughing and glancing about. He went to work early enough that the streets clung to the half-dark of dawn and entertained the last stragglers from an all-night fog party. She would be in bed, tousled and gorgeous. They made a good couple. He was tallish, short hair, sharp nose and easy smile. She was shorter, long black hair and pouty. Everything Amber wasn't.
 

He kept walking, staring at his phone. He was busy today. Too busy really. His fingers moved before his brain told them no.
 

Are you free at lunch?

Can be. What time?

David's heart leapt into his mouth and started thumping. He swallowed, forcing it back down so it punched his rib cage, demanding release.
 

Half 12?

My place xxx.

He thought about skipping and tapping his heels together. It would most likely land him on his arse, so he settled for a sort of embarrassed, middle-class English fist raise. The mental image of tennis players celebrating dampened the heat rushing around his body. He was shivering again by the time he reached the station.
 

The journey was long enough for his fantasies to run their course and when the train rolled into Paddington he had to stay sitting and shuffle about, picturing Andy Murray until he could stand up.
 

The day went horribly slow. Despite his busyness, every time he glanced at the clock the hands had barely moved. But every minute brought him closer to Steph, and he clung to that, until he finally decided he could lunch break without anyone frowning at him and he was out the door.
 

His mind was filled with the crappy advert that had taken up most of his morning. 'Who doesn't want a better life?'

It was wrong. It sucked and invoked entirely the wrong imagery but the rest of the copy was so strong and only worked with that headline. So he'd gone round it and round it and now he couldn't think of anything else. The Thames smelled today, salty with a hint of rotting food, but the sun was out and the wind brisk enough to throw in some roasted chestnut and candyfloss from the South Bank to balance it out.
 

The flower guy was there again. When was the last time he bought flowers for Amber? He flushed, then smiled as he glanced over the Thames. Just over there, tucked behind the IMAX was Steph's flat. He slowed as he reached the stall. He'd never bought Steph flowers, either. He never knew what to buy. Roses were so clichéd, but then, flowers were clichéd, weren't they?

He shrugged. How the hell was he supposed to know? He picked up his pace but the smell assaulted him as it always did and his footsteps slowed. The scent was amazing, overwhelming, and his nose wrinkled up. A bunch of roses thrust out at him from the table, the colour of wine in candlelight and open just enough to make him wonder what lay within.
 

Which was daft, because he knew what lay within. But he still longed to find out and found himself standing before them, entranced by the soft petals and pungent smell.
 

'They're lovely, aren't they?'

It wasn't the voice he expected. The guy had a shaved head and wore this over-sized coat that seemed derigueur for anyone selling flowers or gig tickets. His voice sounded like he'd just stepped off of
University Challenge.
 

'Yeah, they're quite nice. How much?'

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