Blood of the Dead: A Zombie Novel (Undead World Trilogy, Book One)

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Blood of the Dead: A Zombie Novel (Undead World Trilogy, Book One) Page 25

by Fuchs, A. P.


  “We need to land,” Joe said.

  Billie tugged on August’s sleeve. “What’s happening?”

  “Not sure. We’re—” A crack of thunder cut him off. Its sudden low boom sent a shockwave through Joe’s chest.

  Billie yelped. August’s brown eyes went wide.

  A bolt of off-white lightning crackled in the sky beside the helicopter. Ahead, an enormous ghostly skull flashed in the clouds, taking up the whole windshield.

  Joe gasped along with the others.

  BOOM! The thunder shook the helicopter and August’s hands strained against the controls.

  Suddenly, his face screwed up and he squinted his eyes.

  “What?” Joe said.

  “I—”

  KRA-BANG!

  Joe flew back in his seat. Billie fell into him. Before he could help her back into her seat, another boom of thunder rocked the chopper and another pale, jagged skull flashed against the sky.

  Whispers invaded the helicopter. Low, distant. The words incomprehensible, but if Joe didn’t know any better, he’d say they sounded foreign, middle eastern. The rhythm of the words were hypnotic enough that, for a moment, worry over what just flashed in the sky seemed to fade.

  Another skull. Then another quickly to the right.

  KRA-BOOM!

  Joe and Billie bounced to the other seat as the helicopter suddenly angled upward.

  “This isn’t your world!” August yelled. “This is not your time! This isn’t—”

  Lightning streaked across the sky and thunder rocked the chopper, sending August up then back down again in his seat so violently his headset bounced off and landed beside him.

  Low static drifted from the earmuffs. So did voices.

  “There’s someone out there!” Billie screeched, pointing to the headset.

  Joe leaned forward, grabbed the headset, then brought one of the muffs to his ear.

  Voices clamored for attention above the static:

  “Raven Two, this is Raven Three, over.”

  “Roger that, Raven Three.”

  “Found a way out yet?”

  “None. It—”

  CRACK!

  “Ténébreux nuages. Grand nombre!”

  “Check votre écartement.”

  “Ils—”

  CRACK!

  “Kann nicht eine Sache sehen!”

  “Hast du jene Schädel gesehen?”

  “Ja. Vier. Nein. Dort! Fünf!”

  “Versuchst zum—”

  CRACK!

  The line went dead.

  The whispers surrounding the helicopter grew louder. Joe wished he could understand them.

  “What’s going on, Joe?” Billie asked, hanging tightly onto the sleeve of his coat. “Who’s talking?”

  The thunder roared.

  “It’s Aramaic!” August shouted over the thunder’s echo. “At least I think it is.”

  The old man tried to speak but seemed at a loss for words. They all were. The old timer’s thoughts raced behind his eyes and Joe feared the guy might have a heart attack.

  A jagged skull with an open, grinning mouth flashed right beside their window.

  The whispers grew louder.

  BOOM!

  CRACK! White lightning intermixed with bright gray snapped in six jagged streaks in front of them.

  August tried turning the helicopter, attempting to avoid them.

  Heart pounding, Joe fell against the side window from the inertia.

  Another skull.

  Another burst of thunder.

  Static from August’s headset the only constant in the turbulence.

  KRA-BANG!

  The helicopter bounced up then dropped down.

  A series of skulls spackled the sky.

  Lightning flashed.

  The whispers ripped through the air like razors. Their rhythmic words sent shivers up Joe’s spine. Whatever comfort they once had was gone.

  KA-BANG!

  Lightning ripped from a dense cloud that had appeared before them, streaking straight at them, driving into the chopper.

  They all covered their heads, expecting to be showered in a rain of glass. Instead, the inside of the helicopter lit up. The light was so bright that when it flashed down, Joe could hardly see, just a multitude of black stars blanketing his vision.

  Gravity took over and they were all leaning forward.

  The clouds grew thicker and thicker.

  Slick, gray muck from the clouds’ mist coated the windshield, blocking the flashing skulls from view.

  KRA-BANG!

  SNAP!

  BOOM!

  August yelped.

  Billie screamed.

  Joe called out to April for help.

  The helicopter jerked backward and Joe’s back was slammed against his seat.

  “ARRGGGHHH!” August growled, clutching the controls.

  The whispers stopped.

  So did the static on the headset.

  Watery gray gunk coated the glass, making it impossible to see outside.

  “August, did we—” Joe began but was cut off by a sudden WHAM as something hard slammed up against the bottom of the helicopter.

  Everyone lurched forward as they suddenly came to a stop, the vibration from the impact still reverberating through every bone in Joe’s body.

  They all sat there, unmoving, their bodies too busy registering that they appeared to be on the ground. What saved them, Joe didn’t know.

  “Joe?” Billie said, her voice small and far away.

  He looked over at her. She sat in a crash position, head pressed tightly to her thighs, hands folded against the back of her head, elbows hugging her knees.

  August just sat there, jaw hanging open. Was he—

  Joe was about to say his name but the old man jerked in his seat, shut the chopper off and scrambled to open the cockpit door.

  When he did, warm sunlight streamed in.

  37

  Intangible

  August stepped out of the helicopter, half expecting to set foot on the gold streets of heaven. If God didn’t hold against him his challenging Him, that was. And if the helicopter being able to fly on empty was any indicator, so far God was being merciful not only to him but to Joe and Billie as well.

  But it wasn’t heaven August set foot on. It was the gray, cracked pavement of a parking lot, one partly filled with cars off a busy street.

  Joe and Billie hopped out of the helicopter, shielding their eyes from the sun’s bright glare.

  “What . . .” Billie said.

  It didn’t make sense. None of it did.

  One minute they were in the sky, the next somehow safely on the ground in the parking lot of a . . . bank?

  Brow furrowed, August scanned the street running alongside the bank. This was Henderson Highway. Henderson Highway as it was before the days of gray clouds. Before it became the Haven.

  I got to be dreaming, August thought. I have to be. He’d had dreams like this before. The kind where something deep within told him that, despite the realism, actual reality was waiting for him on the other side of the veil of sleep. Yet right now, that feeling—that knowing—that this was a dream failed him.

  This was real.

  Joe came up beside him; Billie, too.

  “Where are we?” Joe asked quietly.

  August swallowed the lump in his dry throat. “I don’t know.” He glanced back at the helicopter. The black flying machine sat there in the middle of the parking lot, propeller unmoving, its hull covered in a pasty gray residue, most likely the goopy, leftover mist from the storm clouds. He didn’t know what was more odd: the simple sight of a helicopter sitting in a bank’s parking lot or that no one seemed to notice it was sitting there.

  The cars whipped by on the highway to the left, all seeming oblivious to their presence. One car coming down the street slowed, right blinker flashing, and turned into the parking, heading straight for the chopper.

  It wasn’t slowing down. Didn’
t the driver see it?

  “Look out!” August said and got behind Joe and Billie and pushed them to the side just as the car collided with the helicopter. Instead of a loud crash and a brilliant display of metal ripping apart metal, the car sailed through the helicopter as if it wasn’t there. It pulled into an empty stall and the driver, a young woman with too much makeup, got out and headed toward the bank’s doors, her high heels clacking against the pavement. She didn’t pay them any mind.

  “What’s going on?” August breathed.

  “Did you see that?” Billie said as Joe walked around the vehicle, his eyes searching it up and down as if for any damage. “It just passed right through it! Just straight on through!”

  “I saw it, Billie, but I don’t believe it,” August said.

  Joe joined with them again. He seemed at a loss for words.

  August’s mind went blank. He had seen a lot in his lifetime. He had thought that after he witnessed the dead rise and walk around, he’d finally seen the unbelievable. Even that couldn’t have prepared him for what just happened.

  “Hey! Hey!” Billie screeched as she ran to the edge where the parking lot met the road.

  “Billie, get back here!” Joe shouted after her and ran to her side.

  She waved frantically at the cars passing by. No one slowed. No one stopped. An older black woman with a flower-patterned kerchief made her way down the sidewalk alongside the bank.

  Billie ran up to her.

  “Help! We need help!” she yelled, pointing back at August and the helicopter.

  The woman continued on her way, eyes fixed forward, seeming completely unaware that Billie was there.

  “Hey, I’m talking to you! Aren’t you listening to—” She moved to grab the woman by the shoulders and her hands passed through her. Billie shrieked and recoiled. A moment later her legs gave out from under her and she fell to the sidewalk. Her hands passed through the cement as she went to break her fall and she looked as if she would continue toppling forward into the ground had Joe not caught her and hauled her back to her feet.

  She fought against him, screaming and crying inconsolably.

  August jogged up to them. “Hold her!”

  “I am!” Joe snapped.

  Billie fought in his arms and wouldn’t calm down.

  “Billie,” August said. “Billie, listen to me.”

  She kept screaming. “I’m dead! I’mdeadI’mdeadI’mdead!”

  “No, you’re not!” August shouted above her voice though he wasn’t entirely sure he was telling the truth.

  Maybe this was what happened after you died? Maybe you did co-exist with the living on a plane of existence unbeknownst to the rest of the world? If that’s true, he thought, then everything I’ve believed about God and about life has been a lie. He clenched his teeth together. The dead rising, the world ending in a way not foretold—what if I was wrong? He shook his head. No, don’t think that. The helicopter flew on empty. It flew on empty. Remember that. Where are You!

  Billie kept shrieking, totally breaking down. “Help! I’m dead! Des! Mom! Dad! Audrey!”

  August shoved Joe away from her and grabbed her flailing arms. “Billie, look at me. Look at me!”

  Her eyes wouldn’t meet his. Instead she thrashed about. Without thinking, his aged palm snapped up and swatted her across the cheek.

  “Hey!” Joe said and grabbed his hand just as he was about to do it again.

  Billie’s shocked blue eyes met August’s.

  Joe moved to grab him; August snapped out his hand and held him back. “One sec.” Still holding one of her hands, he turned to Billie and said as sternly yet as comfortingly as he could muster, “You are not dead. Please, calm down.”

  Tears dripped from her eyes and fear lit up her gaze.

  “Something strange has happened. That’s all. Just, please, calm down.”

  Joe’s chest pressed against his palm; August knew he only had Billie’s best interest at heart.

  “I’m not going to hit her again, Joe,” he said. “I’m sorry for that. Billie, I’m sorry. I just needed to get your attention.”

  She pulled away from him and turned around and buried her face in her hands. Joe came beside her and attempted to put an arm around her shoulder. She quickly drew away.

  Placing his hands on his hips, August turned, squinted against the sun, and stared at the bank. “What’s going on?”

  38

  The Man in the White Coat

  While August stared off at the bank, Joe paced beside Billie, giving her a moment.

  Heart racing, legs jittery, his mind raced with a million thoughts, all images: the bright sun, the car driving through the helicopter, Billie’s hands passing through that woman’s shoulders, August hitting her, the storm clouds, the undead, Des, the X-09, April and her gorgeous black hair and brilliant gray eyes, that woman with too much makeup not seeing them, the cars that continued to drive by without pausing to look at the chopper in the bank’s parking lot, the sun, the storm, Billie falling, her hands passing through the pavement, him catching her, April, their cries gone unheard, August flying the helicopter on empty—Over and over they played. The past, the present. His head hurt.

  He reached for the X-09 inside his coat and gripped its handle. The power he normally felt from holding it brought little comfort and very little sense of control. Who was he kidding? This was an uncontrollable situation! There was no explanation. This was impossible. This couldn’t be happening.

  He’d always thought he’d be able to handle anything, that nothing would surprise him anymore. There was nothing left to lose after April. His life, what little left of it there was, counted for nothing. If he died at the hands of the undead, so be it. If the storm had taken him, so be it. If now, if he was dead and was a ghost among the living in a world where the undead didn’t exist, so be it.

  “They’re not here,” he said quietly. Then he shouted at August: “They’re not here!”

  August turned around to face him. “What?”

  Billie kept to herself, some ten feet away on the grass bordering the bank’s property.

  “The dead,” Joe said. “They’re not here.”

  The old man glanced around, as if reevaluating his surroundings for the first time. “They’re gone,” he said, if only to himself.

  Joe put a hand above his eyes. “The sky’s clear, too. Just a few clouds. White ones.”

  “It’s summer, just like before the rain came,” August said.

  “Where are we?” Joe asked. A strange idea popped into his head but he wanted to see if August would say it first before he did.

  “Home. At least, what it used to be.”

  “The way I see it,” Joe said, “we’re either dead and the ‘other side’ is just a pleasant carbon copy of real life, or we’re—”

  August arched an eyebrow.

  He couldn’t say it. To do so would sound, well, just plain crazy.

  Mouth clamped shut, old lips pressed together, August didn’t reply but instead seemed to be waiting for him to finish.

  “We’re in the past, before the rain came.” Joe’s heart skipped a beat and he felt his cheeks flush at the absurdity of the notion. “Or in the future after the dead are gone,” he quickly added, as if that would make it better.

  It didn’t.

  “I don’t know where or even when we are,” August said.

  Another car pulled into the parking lot and passed through the helicopter. Joe couldn’t help but stare as the car continued on its way just like the other, as if nothing had happened.

  A man with a big belly in a plaid shirt exited the bank, went to his rusting brown pickup, and backed out of his spot. He, too, passed through the chopper and joined the traffic on the road.

  “Billie, did you see—”

  She wasn’t on the lawn beside the building anymore. Instead, she stood by the front door to the bank, poking at it with her hand. The closer Joe got to her, the more he was able to see what she was d
oing. Slowly, she pressed her fingers against the glass. They passed through the door as if through air. She pulled her hand back and did it again. And again. And again.

  “Careful, Joe,” August said from behind him as he approached Billie.

  But before he could talk to her to try and figure out what was going on, Billie passed through the door and went in.

  * * * *

  Head aching, eyes stinging from her outburst, Billie slowly made her way through the bank. People milled about, others sat in the waiting area; while others stood at the tills, speaking with the tellers while fishing in their purses or wallets.

  The woman with too much makeup snapped her gum as she walked toward her. The woman’s shoulder passed through hers as she walked by, heading for the doors. The woman stopped before the doors, adjusted her purse over her shoulder, then opened the door just as it appeared Joe and August were about to pass through the door like she had.

  The two men entered.

  The old man and Joe searched the people, obviously looking for her.

 

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