Blog of the Dead (Book 3): Lost (24 page)

Read Blog of the Dead (Book 3): Lost Online

Authors: Lisa Richardson

Tags: #Zombie Apocalypse

BOOK: Blog of the Dead (Book 3): Lost
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March

March 1, 9am

I can’t stand the suspense any longer. I want to do a pregnancy test!

9.30pm

I’m stunned. Numb. I wasn’t expecting to feel like this – nothing. My hand is shaking as I write this, so I know somewhere I feel something. I’m in shock, I guess…

‘I want you to stay here,’ said Misfit earlier today as he strutted towards the van.

‘No, I want to come into town with you.’

‘Please, just humour me here, Sophie,’ said Misfit, his hand on my left cheek. ‘I want to keep you safe. I always have but especially now.’

‘Like I said before, you can’t keep me locked up in here.’

‘No, of course not,’ said Misfit. ‘You couldn’t live like that anymore than I could. Look around us, there are fields and hills surrounding us and very few zombies. You’ve got all that to roam in, but not the town. There’s no need for you to go there.
Please
, just do this one thing for me.’

‘But I’ve been there before. I know the place. I can–’

‘I’ll be OK.’

I let out a sigh. ‘Alright,’ I said through gritted teeth. ‘Be safe.’

I watched Misfit stalk off to the campervan and climb inside. ‘I will,’ he said, leaning out the door. ‘I love you.’

‘I love you too.’

I heard the door slam and the cranky old engine started up. I hoped the temperamental vehicle would get him there and back OK. I watched him drive away with a heart as heavy as it was light. With the dread of watching Misfit leave combined with my joy and excitement at the possibility of being pregnant, I felt like a hot air balloon not quite filled with enough gas; too heavy for lift off, but too light to sink all the way to the ground.

The camper disappeared from view behind a hedge but I carried on watching. I could see the dark shapes of three zombies staggering through a distant field, too far away to be a problem. They’d pass by without ever knowing we were here.

Me and Kay were in the living room when we heard the horn blaring. I’d been napping, overcome with a sudden tiredness but at the sharp sound, my head shot off the arm of the sofa.

‘What the fuck…?’ said Kay, looking up from the book she was reading.

‘D’you think that’s Misfit? What could have happened?’

We both stood and headed towards the window. I was wrong, it wasn’t Misfit. Instead, I saw a white car, too far off to see who was at the wheel. I looked at Kay, panic clawing at my insides.

‘Shit. What do we do?’ I said.

‘We get out the way,’ said Kay. ‘They aren’t bloody stopping.’

The car sped down the track towards the cottage’s grounds and showed no signs of slowing.

‘Fuck!’ I said. If the car carried on at the rate it was going, it would crash through the gate and into the living room, right where we stood.

Me and Kay darted from the room, down the hall and grabbed our weapons from the kitchen table.

‘This way,’ I said to Kay, nodding to the back door. I figured it was best not to be seen just yet, not until we knew who and what we were dealing with.

I expected to hear a crash at any moment, indicating the vehicle had made contact with our cottage but aside from a racket that suggested they had busted through the gate, the sound of metal meeting brick never happened. Me and Kay snuck around the side of the building, careful not to be seen, and peered out as far as we dare. I could see the car had come to a stop just a metre or so from the living room window. All was still.

After a moment the driver’s side opened and I watched as a teenage girl, no more than around fourteen or fifteen staggered out onto the grass. Her arms, neck and face were smeared with fresh red blood but I couldn’t see from that distance if she had been bitten. She scrambled to the back of the car, and she stood for a moment, her wild eyes flicking left and right. The girl opened the rear side door and she reached inside. That’s when I noticed there was someone else on the back seat. The girl lifted the man – I could just make out shaggy hair and a beard – into a sitting position. By the way the man’s head lolled back I knew he was unconscious. The girl slipped her left arm under the man’s arms and began to haul him out head first. She managed to drag him from the car but she didn’t have the strength to hold him up and the pair of them disappeared from view as they collapsed to the ground on the other side of the car.

‘Let’s go save a stranger,’ said Kay and she darted across the front garden towards the car.

I followed her and as we rounded the vehicle, I saw the girl’s eyes widen at the sight of us. She sat on the grass, her eyes darting from me to Kay, with the man’s head on her lap.

‘It’s OK,’ I said. ‘We’re here to help.’

‘No one can help.’ The girl’s shoulders sagged and she looked down at the man.

As she stroked the hair from his face I saw a tear roll from her cheek and fall onto his forehead. He looked a lot older than her, maybe mid to late forties. His overgrown dark hair was peppered with grey and the corners of his eyes were lined. I guessed he’d been a good looking guy in his day but the apocalypse had drained him, left him etched and gaunt. He had been bitten, that much was clear – a chunk of flesh was missing from his neck.

‘There’s one thing we can do for him,’ I said.

The girl’s eyes shot up to look at me and I waited for her to scream at me and refuse to let us put him down. Instead she let out a little gasp and gave a slight nod of her head.

‘You understand what I mean?’

‘Yes,’ she sobbed.

‘We need to do it now,’ I said. ‘I don’t think he has long before he…’ I was going to say, before he dies of his injuries but I couldn’t finish. I knelt down before the girl. ‘Do you want to be here when…’

 

‘Daddy, I’m sorry, Daddy.’ The girl leaned forwards and spoke the words close to her dad’s ear. ‘I love you,’ she added before she sat up and looked at me. ‘No. I don’t want to be here.’

‘OK, come on,’ I said.

I stood and held my hand out to her. She gently lifted her dad’s head off her lap and placed it on the grass. I saw his eyes flutter open and he looked at his daughter.

‘I’m sorry,’ she said and she leant forwards and kissed his forehead. She hugged him, holding on tight, blocking my view of him. She remained like that, her shoulders shaking with violent sobs, and I worried her dad would turn and bite her.

‘We need to go,’ I urged. She didn’t move so I leant forwards and placed a hand on her back and rubbed it gently. ‘Come on, sweetie.’

The girl’s body tensed and she straightened up. She sat looking down at her dad for a few seconds before she said, ‘Good bye,’ in a small, broken voice. Her dad gazed up at her, his eyelids flickering until, like a flame in a draft, they went out.

I held my hand out to the girl and, after a slight hesitation, she grasped it. I helped her to her feet and she shot off towards the cottage. I turned to Kay.

‘I got it,’ she said.

I nodded and headed off after the girl. I found her sitting with her back against the wall outside the back door. Her legs were drawn up and she was hugging them to her chest. Tears streamed down her cheeks. ‘I couldn’t do it. I just couldn’t.’

‘Come on, let’s get you inside,’ I said.

I placed an arm around her shoulders and helped her up. I guided her in through the back door and settled her onto a chair at the kitchen table. I crouched down beside her, my body responding, I noticed, in a maternal way. I wanted to hug her, to take the pain away. Even though she wasn’t that much younger than me, she was still a child and a child who had just lost her last surviving parent at that. I wanted to mother her.

‘I know nothing I say right now will help, but you’re safe now. We’ll take care of you.’

She managed to register the barest hint of a smile on her tearstained face before erupting into more sobs. I placed a hand on her knee and rubbed.

‘I’m Sophie,’ I said after a moment.

The girl looked up at me. ‘Rachel,’ she croaked.

‘You coped incredibly well out there, Rachel. You’re going to be just fine.’

Kay appeared at the back door. Rachel began to cry afresh, realising what her presence indicated. Kay walked soberly into the room, shoving her bloodstained axe through her belt and covering it over with her shirt before coming to a stop with her back resting against the sink.

‘We’ll help you bury him,’ I said. ‘We can give him a good–’

‘There won’t be time,’ said Rachel cutting me off.

‘What’d you mean?’ asked Kay.

‘They’re coming.’

‘Who?’

‘They followed me. Sorry.’

‘Whoa, slow down and tell us what’s happened,’ I said. I stood and pulled out the chair next to Rachel and sat on it.

‘Me and my dad, we’d been staying in a house just down the road, closer to the village. We’d been there for months after the last place we stayed at… well…’ Rachel hung her head and I watched a tear fall onto her thigh, staining the grubby light blue denim a darker blue.

‘You don’t have to do this now,’ I said.

‘No. I do,’ she said urgently. ‘It was just me and Dad after that and everything was quiet – for months it was quiet. Dad was really good at finding food. He was good at getting into other houses and he got a lot of supplies that way. So we were OK. But,’ she said, looking up at me, ‘today, Dad had just got back from scavenging and I was out front helping to unload the car, when they came. We heard them before we saw them – a sort of rumbling. I’d not seen so many zombies at once since we got out of London in the early days.’

‘What?’ said Kay.

‘Dad told me to get in the car but I panicked and ran for the house. We tried to stay out of sight but they knew we were inside. They managed to get in. We ran for the car. Somehow I managed to get there without getting bitten…Well, you saw for yourself. If only I’d got into the stupid car when he’d first said…’

‘Don’t blame yourself,’ I said.

‘I bundled Dad in the back and I just drove. Dad had given me a few lessons in case… but I panicked and… I’m so sorry. I didn’t mean to bring them here.’

‘Shit,’ I said and I jumped to my feet.

I tore down the hall and into the living room. I peered outside and sure enough, I saw a horde of zombies lumbering down the track towards the cottage from the road beyond.

Rachel appeared next to me at the window. I saw her glance down at her dad’s body laid out on the grass beside the car. Luckily his head was hidden behind the vehicle. She touched the glass with her fingertips, then raised her vision to the approaching zombies.

There were bigger things to worry about.

‘Holy-mother-fucking-shit-fuck!’ I said as I watched the sea of zombies approach down the track. I remembered Rachel saying she hadn’t seen as many zombies at once since leaving London, and it was as if the population of London in zombie form was heading towards us now. OK I exaggerate slightly. Only slightly.

‘Bring ‘em on,’ said Kay, clutching her axe as she joined us at the window.

‘Kay, it’s you, me and a teenage girl against that lot – are you mad?’ I said as I realised it really was just me, Kay and a frail teenage girl who’d just lost her dad versus a huge horde of zombies. And we had no chainsaws, no guns, no long range weapons at all; just an axe, a claw hammer, a carving knife and whatever we could arm Rachel with at short notice. There was no way we could keep that amount of zombies out of the cottage. We were done. We didn’t even have the glass bottles available to make petrol bombs… bombs… I glanced at the car Rachel had arrived in. I had an idea.

‘I need your help, both of you,’ I said to Kay and Rachel. ‘Come on!’ I darted out of the room, along the hall, through the kitchen and out the back door.

‘What are you doing?’ asked Kay when I stopped outside the shed where the garden tools are kept. The shed was quite new, I’m guessing put up by the young couple that lived in the cottage before us and it looked somewhat out of place compared to the older, original outbuildings with their faded, crumbling lichen covered brickwork.

I pulled open the door and ducked inside, ignoring Kay’s question. She’d soon see. I remembered seeing some discarded pots of paint, rollers and drip trays in there and I hoped I’d also find something else – I lifted the clear plastic bottle of white spirit up as though it were a prize. ‘Yes!’ I said. I also grabbed an edging knife, a long handled tool with a squat but sharp arrowhead-like head that I’d used to cut the edges of the veg patch. Satisfied, I shoved past Kay and back outside. ‘Come on,’ I said again, handing the edging knife to Rachel and I sped off to the front of the cottage.

When I rounded the corner I could see that the horde was not far off. With the gate down, they’d gain access to the cottage in no time. With that many zombies lending their weight, I knew we couldn’t defend the old building for long. They’d get in.

‘We need to run. Now!’ said Rachel, her eyes bulging with terror as she gazed at the zombies.

‘No. I’m not leaving here with my boyfriend not knowing where we are. And I’m not leaving this lot for him to drive into,’ I said.

I stopped beside the car.

‘You’re not thinking of driving through that lot, are you?’ asked Kay. ‘Cos that would be going full fucktard.’

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