Read LZR-1143: Within Online

Authors: Bryan James

LZR-1143: Within (10 page)

BOOK: LZR-1143: Within
3Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

He wiped the bile from his mouth, pushing himself the last ten feet. Ahead of him, Bridget fell against the last door, merely twenty feet away from the first of the large group that were staggering forward through the line of cubes. The door blasted open and slammed against the wall of the empty stairwell, and Louis fell through, nearly catapulting himself over the railing as he flew into the relative safety of the hardened walls. He turned to the door, pushing it shut against the hydraulic arm, and cursing as it moved too slowly.

Bridget reached the external door and paused.

“How do we know …” she began, but he simply shook his head.

They didn’t know, but this was the last door. They had no way to see, to look outside and tell if Ty’s fate waited for them. No way to determine if safety existed.

“Fuck it,” she spat, slamming her hand against the lever and pushing the door outward.

It stopped only inches from the frame.

“Shut it, shut it!” he screamed, even as the first body hit the door to the stairwell behind him, fists and hands and feet and mouths and teeth grinding and slamming into the metal from the other side. The door slammed him in the back as Bridget managed to pull hers shut, neatly severing a single pinky finger that fell to the floor of the stairwell landing. She cursed and looked at him struggling against the tide of creatures behind him. Hands were snaking into the gap between the door and the frame, arms pushing through, then faces. Moans sliced into the empty stairwell.

“Up,” he said, gasping for breath, and then leaping forward, watching as her blue-haired form climbed the first set. He fell forward, gashing his hand on the cement floor and struggling up the first several steps.

Behind Louis, the door slammed open, several bodies falling through and a stench of foul body odor and the copper smell of blood filtering into his protesting nostrils.

He followed Bridget up the stairs and through the door to the second floor, listening to the innumerable footfalls behind him.

“What now?” he said, voice high and panicked. She was looking around anxiously, watching as several heads bobbed clumsily on the far side of the floor.

Shit. They were upstairs.

“Gotta be the skylight,” she said curtly, still short of breath. She didn’t pause, didn’t stop. She started to run toward the center of the building.

“Shit god dammit,” he said under his breath before following. Bodies slammed against the door behind him as he realized that this was it. If they couldn’t get through the only window in the building, the game was over. The building that had for so long crushed his soul, would now reave it from his body. He wanted to scream with the hopelessness of it all.

Bridget disappeared into the small room in the center of the floor, and as he stumbled in, watched her as she pulled the single table underneath the spot of daylight. She left the table and grabbed the fire extinguisher near the fridge, climbing to the table top and barely pausing before flinging the heavy metal tube toward the window pane.

Cheap glass shattered and she flung her hands to her face, showered by shards and small pieces of dirty window.

“You have to go first,” she said quickly, crouching down on the table, and looking over his shoulder at the opening stairwell door, head whipping to the side as the second smaller group started to shamble toward the room.

He was leaning over, gasping for breath and struggling for air. She punched him hard on the shoulder, and he stood up.

“What? Why?”

She grimaced and grabbed his arm, pulling him up after her.

“Because, fuck-tard, I don’t have enough strength to pull myself up or help you up. I can help boost you, and you can pull me up. Don’t argue, just get up there.” She webbed her two hands together and crouched down, signaling to him to step in her clasped hands.

Louis looked up, noting the distance and taking a breath. It wasn’t impossible, if she helped. If she pushed him up, he could probably do it.

He had never been an upper body strength kind of guy. He couldn’t even do ten pushups. Shit, he could barely hold himself up while making love to his girlfriend.

Not that that happened that often anymore.

“Louis! God damn it! We…are…going…to..
.
di
e
!” She screamed each word, emphasizing the last, and he looked over her shoulder. The creatures were barely fifteen feet away.

There were so many. So much blood.

Some carried pieces of other human bodies. Others bore gaping wounds where their limbs—or organs—had once been.

So much blood.

He stepped into her hands and he flew upward.

His hands grasped broken shards of glass and he screamed, but held on, blood running down his arms immediately. He cringed as he felt it run in rivulets into his armpits, following the contours of his upraised arms.

Below him, Bridget screamed and pushed, giving him the inertia he needed to do a single, life saving pull-up. He scrambled to the gravel surface of the roof, and turned around quickly, the small of tar and asphalt thick in his nose as he lay stomach down on the already warm black rooftop.

Below, Bridget’s blue hair flashed as she whipped her head around, facing a threat yet unseen from his vantage point and screaming. From directly below him, a head lashed forward, teeth flashing and arms pulling. The creature took her leg out from under her and she tumbled to the table top. She thrashed, legs kicking and slamming into the face of a man in a bloody suit. Her foot connected with the jaw, and she stood quickly. He reached down, and she jumped, her hands grasping his wrists in an iron grip. A grip that was clearly informed by the fear of impending death.

The creature surged forward, even as three more staggered through the doorway, stumbling against one another in their urge to find their prey.

He started to pull her up, and she thrashed about, struggling to keep her legs from being grasped by the many hands below. She swung in his arms and he yelled, unable to make his arms pull the moving weight. He felt himself move forward slightly, as the faint incline of the roof began to betray him. Louis was slipping toward the opening.

Below him, Bridget screamed suddenly, her voice betraying an agony not contained to physical pain. He watched as the man in the suit bit into her captured calf, her pants affording no protection as he pulled the thick chunk of flesh from her bone, seeming to detach from the body in slow motion. Trailing streams of blood, the creature leaned its head back and saw Louis, opening his mouth as he did so and giving Louis a view of Bridget’s death knell.

Bridget had never known such pain. Never in her life had she imagined that she could be hurt like this. So primitively, so primal. She screamed in pain, and in fear. She watched Louis’ eyes change. She watched his face as his eyes pronounced her death sentence. She heard him whisper the last human words she would ever hear.

“I’m so sorry.”

His fingers released her forearms and she grasped for the last few seconds of life until the blood on his arms made her lose her grip.

Then, Bridget fell.

Louis turned his head away as they took her. He saw a flash of skin as her shirt was ripped from her torso, nearly twenty creatures crammed into the room as her stomach and breasts were exposed to the ravaging, hungry horde. Her shirt was shredded, and her pants lasted merely seconds longer. Hands darted in, broken nails and jagged teeth, shattered on unknown surfaces, tearing into her soft flesh.

He began to cry, even as she screamed.

Her agony lasted longer than the others. Whatever was done to her was done slowly, without death coming quickly, amongst at least twenty of the creatures. He eventually moved away from the skylight, toward the vast expanse of roof. He moved away from her pain and her death.

As he stared out over the suburban dawn, he watched absently as the slowly winding smoke of distant fires rose to the sky with the same consistency as his tears fell to the ground.

A blossom of flame spun into the air several blocks away, eventually adding to the countless fires burning fitfully in the distance.

Louis sat down heavily on the gravel roof, and for the first time, focused on the mass of humanity clustered below, swarming against the sides of the building. Hundreds streamed from the streets around the building to join their brethren in their hungry vigil. The smells of a new world greeted him with each change of the wind.

Smoke. Chemicals. Blood.

He even though that he could smell fear. Fear and desperation.

He wondered absently about his girlfriend, realizing now that he had never loved her.

But he was sad about the dog.

Fancy that.

Then, he began to laugh. As the sun rose on a ruined city—a city so quickly brought to its knees by uncontrollable circumstance and a collapse of the normal and routine—Louis laughed. The peals of mirth rolled down the cement walls of the bleak bank building.

The laughter filtered over the heads of hundreds of creatures, many of whom turned their heads to this sound of humanity.

To the sound of food.

And still he laughed, as if nothing else remained of the world—or in it.

As if it could fill the void of lost souls.

As if he were the only soul remaining, and his laughter would keep the darkness at bay.

 

***

 

As the sun rose on the new day, from Maine to California and from Washington to Florida, cities were burning, and people were dying. Some news stations were still broadcasting, and some roads still open. Some areas would even hold off for days before succumbing to the plague. But the major cities were falling fast, and no response was, or could be, effective.

Thousands of miles from Harbor Island, in a hospital in New York, an orderly was administering a heavy dose of sedative to a well-known patient. The dosage should have been enough to kill a normal man.

But it didn’t.

Days from when Louis emerged onto the roof of the large banking building, this man would awaken into a world that had drastically changed.

A world that was burning.

A world that had for eons belonged to man, but that now belonged to the dead. 

 

###

 

Scroll down for more zombie goodness, and for a note from the author!

Enjoy this? Want to read some more free zombie stuff?

Check ou
t
LZR-1143: Perspective
s
, a FREE ebook with six short stories set in the zombie apocalypse!

 

JUST CLICK BELOW!

 

 

 

Want to read some more zombie books? Follow the story of Mike McKnight, a former action movie star who awakens in a mental hospital in the middle of this plague—and doesn’t know what the hell is going on.

 

Check ou
t
LZR-1143: Infectio
n
, and the sequel
,
LZR-1143: Evolutio
n
, available on Amazon.com.

 

JUST CLICK BELOW!

 

BOOK: LZR-1143: Within
3Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Tori Amos: Piece by Piece by Amos, Tori, Powers, Ann
Natural Consequences by Kay, Elliott
The Bells by Richard Harvell
First to Kill by Andrew Peterson