The Left Series (Book 1): Leftovers (9 page)

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Authors: Christian Fletcher

Tags: #zombies

BOOK: The Left Series (Book 1): Leftovers
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“Which way to the Interstate to get out of this fuck hole town?” Smith asked, passing me the bottle of bourbon.

I took a swig and guided him
past
my apartment block in the direction of the main road out of Brynston. I shut my eyes and dozed, in the futile hope the worst was over.

I opened my eyes when Smith slammed on the brakes.

“Shit.”

“What’s up?” A stupid question. A throng of roughly a hundred zombies blocked the road at the site where I’d met Pudgy Face earlier in the day.

Smith backed up and spun the vehicle around.

“Any other routes we can take?”

I thought quickly. “Go right, under the bridge,” I screeched. The bourbon bottle spilled in my lap. I pointed out the direction.

Smith screeched the vehicle to the right to avoid the advancing undead hordes. He put his foot on the gas and passed under the viaduct. The road on top of the bridge was the route we needed to get to. The street under the viaduct narrowed, blocked by stationary vehicles. Smith went to back up but stopped the Ford in the middle of the street.

“What’s up?” I said again.

Smith pointed to the interior mirror and physically sagged. I turned around in my seat and saw the shambling crowd of undead approaching. I looked around desperately and saw the large DIY store a few hundred yards to our right.

“Let’s try and make it over there,” I said.

Smith nodded. We jumped out of the cab and ran for the store. It was a huge brick building with a pointed glass roof and big, plate glass front windows. I didn’t completely know why I’d suggested going there. It would more than likely be empty and locked down. People shopped in the store for paint, wallpaper and domestic tools. Not the kind of things people needed anymore.

The vast parking lot was nearly empty with roughly a dozen vehicles dotted around the slots. We stumbled up the inclining grass verges surrounding the parking lot and headed for the main entrance. No lights lit the inside of the store and the place looked as dead as a graveyard.

Banners in the window promised us a 25% discount on selected in store items. Predictably, the sliding glass shop front doors were closed and didn’t open automatically when we approached.

“Let’s see if there’s a way in around the back.”

Smith nodded and followed me around the back of the building. A tarmac delivery bay was steeped in shadows at the rear of the DIY store. Skips, packing boxes and discarded stock lay at the back of the loading bay. We searched for an open fire door or bathroom window but saw no way inside.

The wire mesh fence surrounding the outdoor garden section was roughly eight feet high and topped with a double row of barbed wire. Smith and I lifted a stack of wooden pallets next to the fence. I found a piece of old carpet in the skip, wrenched it free and slung it over the top of the two rows of barbed wire on top of the fence. I hopped on the pallets and hauled myself up the fence and over the top. I jumped down into the garden section. Smith followed me to the other side of the fence.

“We’re okay for a minute,” he said, panting. “Those zombies aren’t much good at climbing.”

“There’s not much we can use here,” I said. “I don’t think we could fight the zombies with a bunch of limp geraniums.”

Smith gave me a quizzical look. I didn’t suppose he knew a geranium from a weed, not that I was any sort of gardening genius.

“Let’s go inside and take a look around.” he suggested.

We manually slid back the glass paneled door into the store, using some wooden fence posts as levers. The interior of the store was dark with only the back-up emergency lights casting an eerie glow across the floor. We saw right through the store to the front door. The throng of zombies reached the glass frontage and relentlessly slapped and banged in a hopeless attempt to get inside.

“Do you think that glass will hold them?”

“Yeah,” Smith nodded. “It’ll keep them out for a while but we can’t stay in here forever. They might not be able to get in easily but we can’t get out easily which kind of evens up the score. Let’s hope they lose interest in the place and go back to the center of town. We’ll try and keep out of sight for a while and they might forget about us.”

We crept further inside the dark store and slumped down between the shopping aisles. I sat with my back to rows of paint brushes facing a line of garden tools. Smith sat the opposite way around, facing me.

Smith lit a cigarette and passed one to me.

“It’s been a hell of a day, kid,” he sighed, exhaling the smoke.

“It’s been a day to forget,” I whispered.

“I don’t think we’ll ever forget today in a hurry. And the trouble is we don’t know how many more tomorrows there are going to be.”

Smith sounded mournful and I couldn’t think of anything to say to cheer him up. We were marooned with no food in a DIY store on the edge of a small town, surrounded by flesh eating zombies and no means of escape.

“Where do you live in New York?” I tried to change the subject.

“Brooklyn,” he blurted.

“Have you got any family there?”

Smith sighed and didn’t answer. I knew this conversation was going nowhere.

“So what is your real name?” I tried a different tact.

“My first name is Franco but I aint telling you shit about my life, okay?”

I was slightly shocked. I was the only person Smith had for company and thought he might open up slightly but clearly he wasn’t interested in spilling his life story.

“I think Pete Cousins and Marlon are dead,” I said.

“Yeah, most people are dead,” Smith sighed.

“This virus spread so quickly.”

“It’s not so shocking when you think about it,” Smith sounded as though he was about to fall asleep. “There’s always been a war or a plague or some way of wiping out the population when it gets too large. This is just a different way. There’ll be no more or very little reproduction, so the dead who can still walk will just keep going until they fall to pieces.”

I thought about the bigger picture and what horrific scenes must be happening all over the world, New York, London, Rome, Paris, Berlin, Tokyo, Los Angeles; all in utter chaos. My eyelids drooped and I heard Smith snoring lightly. Weariness took hold of me and I descended into sleep mode. The turned down adrenalin rush combined with the comfort of a dark, dry place switched me off like an overworked computer.

I was jolted awake some time later by a figure leaning over me with a hand covering my mouth. The store was still in darkness. I recognized the figure as Smith and thought for a moment he was trying to suffocate me.

“Shhh…” Smith whispered. “There’s someone in the store.”

I listened and heard a scuffing of shoes on the vinyl floor. I nodded and Smith took his hand off my mouth. I tried to pinpoint where the noise came from and figured whoever was lurching around was in the aisles to my right, roughly fifteen yards away.

Smith quietly stood up and craned his neck, trying to see over the top of the aisles.

I stood up and reached around my back and felt for the golf club in the rifle sling. I slipped it out of the casing, slowly and quietly. I couldn’t believe it when the sound of the Rolling Stones’ ‘Satisfaction’ blurted out on the ringtone from my cell phone.

 

 

 

Chapter Eleven

 

Who or whatever was moving around the shopping isle a few yards from us, thrashed around in alarm at the sound of my cell phone. Something metallic hit the ground. What followed was a noise we’d dreaded. A low monotonous moan told us we had to contend with a zombie inside the store.

Smith took a shovel from the rack next to us and walked around the aisles. I stood still for a moment, not knowing whether to answer the incoming call or help Smith with the zombie. I heard a clang and Smith reappeared with the shovel bent at an odd angle.

“Who’s on the phone?”

I had it in my hand but the caller’s ID read ‘unknown.”

“Hello…”

“Hi Brett. This is Denny. Denny Rosenberg. Where are you?”

“Where are we? Where the fuck did you get to?”

Smith flapped his hand, telling me to keep my voice down.

“Ah, yeah. Sorry about our quick exit at your apartment block. We had to get out of there. We saw a whole bunch of zombies coming our way.”

“Yeah, we found them,” I said. “They chased us into Hal’s DIY store on the edge of town.”

“I’ve been trying to call you but I couldn’t get hold of you. It kept saying it wasn’t possible to connect your call.”

“Are you still with Eazy, Donna and Batfish?”

“Yeah, we got out of town on the overpass and had something to eat. Now we’re just taking a little nap. It’s my turn on sentry watch so I thought I’d try you guys again.”

“Sounds very cozy, Rosenberg. We’re stuck here and we need you to get us out,” I said. “Do you know where the DIY store is and can you make it here to get us out?” I realized I was talking into the phone like a trooper talks through his radio in a war movie.

“I know where you are talking about but I doubt Batfish will want to come out there tonight. She’s very tired and…”

“Rosenberg, you come and get us. You hear me?” My stranded Vietnam trooper act went slightly over the top. “If you come here in daylight every zombie in Brynston will see you coming from the overpass. You have to get here tonight. There are a few zombies here but I think we can get around them.” I knew if the zombies sensed we were in the building during daylight hours, we’d be stuck in the store forever.

Either Rosenberg rang off or the signal evaporated.

“Shit, I don’t know if they are coming or not,” I said

“We have to assume they’re not coming,” Smith sighed. “I don’t think those other three liked us very much, anyway. Let’s take a look around this place. There could be more zombies in the building. Keep out of sight of the front doors and windows.”

Smith picked up a garden fork from the rack of tools and weighed it up as a weapon.

“Might as well use the tools at hand,” he said.

Personally, I preferred my golf club.

We crept between the aisles and made sure we kept out of sight of the zombies at the front window of the store. I took a peek through the racks and saw a thin line of undead still ignorantly hitting the glass door and windows.

A doorway to the left of the cash registers stood half open with total blackness beyond. Smith pointed towards to it and we used the cash desks as cover to skulk across the store floor. We moved slowly through the doorway and I turned on the flash light. We were inside a corridor with a small stairway hopping up a level. The walls were bare, concrete block and the floor was covered in gray vinyl tiles.

I led the way up the stairway pointing the flash light ahead of me. I drew the Beretta and turned off the safety in case of a sudden attack. The stairway led to an upper level occupied by small offices and a washroom.

Smith said he needed to take a leak so I opened the bathroom door and led the way in. I shone the light beam around the room and onto the urinals. I turned away while Smith relieved himself. The flash light flicked across the bathroom mirrors and for a second I caught the vision of a mangled face. I shone the beam back but the face was gone. I backed away from the mirrors, my panic level rose once again.

“I think someone’s in here, Smith,” I hissed.

Before Smith answered, I felt cold dead hands grip the back of my neck and inhaled a whiff of the musky odor the undead emit. A throaty groan came from behind me as I tried to spin around. I thought the mangled teeth were going to connect with the back of my neck any second. I launched myself backward with all the strength I could muster. The zombie slammed into the wall behind me. That maneuver would probably have been enough to throw most living people off me but not this undead sucker; he kept a tight grip on me. I tried to turn again and bring the barrel of the pistol up to the zombie’s head but it kept hold and twisted the collar of my sweatshirt around my throat. The flash light spun from my grasp and rolled across the floor.

“What’s going on?” Smith called out. “I can’t see nothing. It’s too dark.”

“It’s a zombie,” I croaked. “Get it off me.”

Smith picked up the flash light and the beam swung in all directions. He eventually caught us performing our macabre dance in the light. The zombie was male with curly black hair and congealed blood covering the right side of his face and chin. I noticed one of his eye sockets was empty as we swung around in the eerie light.

“Shoot it, Smith,” I squeaked as the yellow teeth came closer to my face. “It’s nearly got me.” I heard fear and panic in my own voice.

Out the corner of my eye, I saw Smith’s silhouette by the urinals. I heard the click of his Desert Eagle and wished he’d hurry up and shoot this ugly fuck.

“Stand still,” Smith yelled. “I can’t get a clear shot.”

I wrestled the zombie back to the sinks and tried to move its head away from mine. Smith kept swaying the flash light in wide arcs. I remembered the hunting knife from the gun store and put my hand under the zombies chin, pushing its head back. I reached for my belt and unclipped the sheath catch. The zombie’s hands released my collar and flailed around my head trying to rip my face apart. The muscles in my arms began to ache and I knew I had to act before fatigue got the better of me. This ghoul wasn’t going to give up. I quickly unsheathed the knife and took a firm grip. The sharp blade briefly glinted in the flash light beam before I plunged it to the hilt in the zombie’s left temple.

At last, the undead creature stopped floundering. It went limp and finally slumped to the bathroom floor. I retrieved the hunting knife and cleaned the blood and gore from the blade using the sink on the wall behind. Smith provided the light without a word. I knew what was going through his mind. He was trying to find the words to ask me if I’d been bitten in the struggle.

“I didn’t get bit, luckily.” I answered Smith’s question for him.

“I couldn’t see,” Smith stammered. “I didn’t want to end up shooting you. You did well there, kid.” Smith seemed genuinely concerned. I thought this was the closest I was going to get to an apology from him for not helping me.

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