Clickers vs Zombies (19 page)

Read Clickers vs Zombies Online

Authors: J.F. Gonzalez,Brian Keene

BOOK: Clickers vs Zombies
3.5Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

He hadn’t told Marion this. He’d given her very little in the way of information, preferring to leave her in the dark as much as possible. All he wanted her to know was that he had a bad feeling about remaining in California, that they would be safer in their cabin in Vail. Off season they would have very little in the way of neighbors, and the cabin was well-stocked with a month’s worth of dried and canned goods. They would have water. They would have contact with the outside world via satellite radio and internet. And there were weapons at the cabin. Augustus didn’t believe in guns, but his son George was an avid hunter and his daughter, Susan, was a member of the NRA. The guns belonged to them. But if Augustus had to learn to use them, he would.

He hadn’t told Marion about what he’d heard on various news and internet reports either. Stories about mutant crab-lobster-scorpion hybrids the news journalists were calling Clickers swarming the beaches on the US west coast, Australia, Japan, India, and South Africa, attacking and eating people. Stories about the dead rising to attack and eat the living. He’d kept watch at the home office as he went about his routine, monitoring the day’s operations from afar while at the same time paying attention to what was going on in the local community. He’d only had to venture into Malibu proper once today, to pick up some flax seed and ginkgo biloba at Helen’s Health Food store in the mall. Helen Ocasek, the proprietor, had asked him to stop by to autograph copies of his first book,
You Have Been Alive Forever
, which she had on constant reorder. This was a common business arrangement between them, and when Augustus had taken the afternoon walk for this errand, everything had seemed normal in Malibu—people were on the beach enjoying themselves, kids were playing in the sand, people were window shopping along mall storefronts. There was a hell of a lot of birds flying inland—that phenomenon hadn’t let up. But if it wasn’t for Augustus’s second sense about what he was feeling, he wouldn’t have insisted they leave for Colorado immediately.

The limo slowed down as traffic became more congested. Marion sat on the far side of the rear seat, a look of extreme worry in her features. “George knows to meet us at the cabin, right?”

“Yes, he does. I left explicit instructions. He, Kelly, and the grandkids will meet us in Vail. I already arranged with a limo company in Boulder to have a car on standby at the airport.”

The driver cut in. “Excuse me, Mr. Livingston, but we have a situation.”

Augustus sat up, trying to see what was going on from his vantage point. “What’s happening? The GPS again?” All he could see was massive congestion.

“No. I don’t know. Some kind of riot or something.”

Marion gasped and gripped his hand. The limousine stopped. He could hear people shouting and screaming outside. There was what sounded like gunfire up ahead. “My God, what’s happening Augie!” Marion cried.

“I don’t know, honey,” Augustus said. He pulled his hand away and darted toward the partition that separated them from the driver. He tapped on the partition and it slid open. A quick look through the front drive windshield told him everything. They were in a standstill and there was some kind of civil disturbance up ahead. “Oh shit,” Augustus said.

“Oh shit is right,” the limousine driver said. “Hold on, Mr. Livingston. I’m gonna see if I can get us the hell away from this mess.”

Augustus didn’t see how he was going to do this. They were boxed in from all sides.

The limousine driver put the vehicle in reverse and backed up quickly. They banged into the car behind them. Augustus wasn’t prepared for the impact and almost tumbled off the seat. Marion was thrown back slightly. She held her right hand over her chest, her eyes wide. Augustus turned to her. “Get your seat belt on!”

Marion snapped her seat belt on and Augustus planted himself on the side seat and did the same. The limousine moved forward and bumped into the car in front of them, then backed up and hit the car behind them again. The driver’s of both vehicles started laying on their horns, but he was paying them no mind.
Do what you have to do to get us out of here
, Augustus silently urged the limo driver. As if he’d heard this subliminal command, the driver continued bashing the limo back and forth, turning the limo around with each backward momentum. Within moments, he was bashing the vehicles on either side of him. Angry honks arose from those drivers, too.

“Hey, what the fuck are you doing, asshole?”

The limo driver paid the protests no mind. He plowed forward and hit the car on their left again with a resounding crash. Even though he was bracing himself for each impact, Augustus was jostled around pretty good. There was a slamming of a car door and an angry male voice. “Get the fuck out of the car, you old, fat, piece of shit!”

Backwards—
smash!
The squeal of tires on asphalt and forward—
smash!

There were more car horns honking now and this time Augustus felt that their driver had broken through. The limo continued forward and there was thump of tires, as if the vehicle had just driven up the curb, and then they were moving forward, probably at about ten miles an hour. There was a sound of running feet behind them and the angry male voice shouted, “Get back here, you fucking asshole, I’m gonna kick your ass!”

Go, keep going
, Augustus thought.

“What the fuck?” the driver said. The limo started to slow down.

“Keep going, just keep going!” Augustus shouted. The dark impressions he was getting had just spiked in their intensity. They were overpowering.

“Ah, fuck!” The limousine skidded to a stop. Marion and Augustus were thrown violently against their seat belts. Up ahead there was the unmistakable sound of two vehicles colliding in a sickening crunch of metal. There were screams of pain, of anguish.

And above it all, the voice of something else. Something overpowering that rode over all.

Augustus looked out the front windshield and what he saw punched a hole through his soul.

Foothill Boulevard resembled the worst NASCAR wreck ever in the history of stock car racing. Several vehicles were on fire. Cars and SUVs were scattered haphazardly along the road in various stages of demolishment. Those people who weren’t running from the scene screaming in terror were being attacked by other people. The ones doing the attacking were biting their victims with a savagery Augustus never in a million years would have expected, or using anything as a weapon—sticks, knives, still-operable vehicles, guns, and other items. For a brief moment he thought this was a dream—he was in a dream state, trapped in a nightmare that was so vivid, so real, that he could hear the screams of victims, smell the smoke from fires, and taste the fear in the air. But then the driver’s side door to the limo opened and their driver spilled out. His hands slapped the roof of the limo on Augustus’s side. “Get out, get out! We gotta get out of here, Mr. Livingston! Now!”

Augustus fumbled for his seat belt, got it unlatched and dove for the door. He opened it and half-stepped out. The limo driver was already on that side of the limo to help. “What’s going on?”

A man wearing green knee-length shorts and a gray tank top appeared. An axe blade was buried in his chest. The front of his shirt was stained with blood. By all rights, he shouldn’t have been alive, but he grinned at them with a sense of malevolence Augustus found utterly terrifying. He took an involuntary step backward as the man advanced on them quickly and grabbed the limo driver.
“Another tasty vessel!”
he said. His voice sounded like a thousand voices speaking together in unison, as if there were a chorus of demons inside him. The limo driver yelped and tried to squirm out of the thing’s grasp, but it was no use. The thing’s grip was too tight, and it bent its head down and took a deep bite out of the limo driver’s neck.

“Yaaaahhh!” The limo driver screeched. Blood spurted, gurgled out like a fountain. Augustus felt his stomach drop. He was dimly aware of Marion in the limousine screaming, telling him to get back inside but he was frozen, shell-shocked by what he was seeing, and then a gaggle of them were suddenly there—a teenage girl with braces, a fat Asian kid with a Mohawk, a tall brown haired surfer-looking dude wearing shorts. All of them had suffered grave wounds to their necks, to other areas of their bodies, as if chunks had been torn out of them. But they walked. And something lived within them. Augustus could see it in their eyes. He couldn’t identify it, but somehow, through some psychic communication, he just knew. He dove back into the limousine and slammed the door shut, locking it. A moment later, their limo driver sat up again, occupied by an entity.

Augustus frantically grabbed his cell phone and tried to place a call. As he did, the driver pulled out his keys, thumbed a button on the remote, and the doors unlocked. Before Augustus could react, the driver yanked open the door of the limousine and, with a grin, seized Marion.

“Augustus,” she shrieked, wide-eyed, her lips pulled back to expose her gums. “Help me!”

He reached for her, but the zombie yanked Marion out of the car and dragged her toward a grove of palm trees along the side of the highway. When she struggled, the corpse slapped her twice, hard. Marion went limp.

“Going to have some fun with this one,”
the zombie crowed.

“You bastard!” Augustus scrambled over the seat. “Leave her alone…”

Ignoring his cries, the zombie dropped Marion on the ground, seized her by the ankles, and continued to drag her toward the trees. Augustus started to give chase, but a dead woman darted toward him, her chin and mouth stained with someone else’s blood. She clutched a ball-peen hammer in one hand, the head of which was also bloody and matted with hair.

She snarled at him.
“Give us a kiss, meat.”

Speechless, Augustus glanced around for a weapon. The only thing within reach was an acoustic guitar. He didn’t have time to wonder how it had gotten there—probably spilled from a car wreck or discarded by a fleeing pedestrian. He grabbed the instrument and swung frantically, smacking the zombie in the face. The creature uttered a squawk, and stumbled backward, dropping her hammer. Augustus swung again, breaking the guitar over her head. Then, without pause, he jammed the broken guitar neck into the zombie’s stomach. The corpse fell to the ground.

Sickened by what he’d done, Augustus turned his attention back to Marion. To his dismay, he saw that the zombie had reached the side of the road, and was disappearing into the trees with her. Other shadowed forms moved and thrashed among the palm trunks. Augustus squinted, and then his eyes went wide when he realized what was happening. It was some type of orgy.

No, not an orgy.

The dead were raping the living, savagely abusing them while simultaneously feasting on them. As he watched, three zombies held a helpless man down. One arched its hips and thrust inside the man, while the other two took bites out of his chest and neck. The depravity was repeated throughout the grove of trees.

“Marion!”

Augustus started forward, pulse pounding, unable to catch his breath, when something thudded against his toe, sending pain rocketing through his body. Screaming, he glanced down and saw the zombie he’d just speared with the guitar neck. She’d regained her hammer. The creature cocked her arm back to deliver another blow to his foot, but Augustus was quicker. He kicked her in the chin, knocking her backward, and then proceeded to stomp on her head again and again. He heard her skull crack and felt her blood soak through his socks and shoes. He didn’t stop until she ceased to move. Then, panting, he turned back to Marion.

“I’m coming, Marion! Just hold on.”

He shuffled forward. Each step brought a fresh jolt of pain to his toe. He’d taken four steps when he heard a new sound, echoing above the screams of the living and the joyous cries of the dead.

CLICK-CLICK. CLICK-CLICK. CLICK-CLICK.

Augustus gaped as a new terror strode onto the highway from the other side. It looked like one of the crab-monsters he’d heard about, but the creature’s coloration was different. He’d been told the Clickers were red, but this one was completely black. The beast towered over the cars, taller than even the tractor trailers. Black, beady eyes the size of basketballs goggled at the scene, suspended on stalk-like appendages. The monster paused in front of the line of palm trees. Then, spying the figures inside the grove, it reared back and began to spray venom from its tail. The noxious liquid splattered across the trees—and the figures beneath them, both living and dead. The foliage began to smoke and hiss, and the tree trunks splintered and cracked. On the ground, both the zombies and their victims congealing together into a massive pool of rapidly liquefying flesh. The melting tree trunks fell, splashing the gore out onto the road. Hissing, the black Clicker rushed forward and began shoveling the sizzling, soupy mess into its beak-like mouth.

“Marion…” Augustus was frantic. Marion was in there, being violated by one of those things and now…now they were screaming in agony.

The monster ignored him, busying itself with devouring the remains. Augustus cast a look back at the grove where he last saw Marion and, unable to make out what was going on, he stumbled back to the limo and collapsed into the seat, barely shutting the door and locking it before he passed out.

 

Other books

The Magic by Rhonda Byrne
Vanished by Callie Colors
Murder on Waverly Place by Victoria Thompson
Melted & Shattered by Emily Eck
No Reprieve by Gail Z. Martin
Bride of Blood:: First Kiss by Anthony E. Ventrello
Changing the Past by Thomas Berger
Fatally Frosted by Jessica Beck
Band of Angel by Julia Gregson
The Way to Wealth by Steve Shipside