Metahumans vs the Undead: A Superhero vs Zombie Anthology (11 page)

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Authors: Eric S. Brown,Gouveia Keith,Paille Rhiannon,Dixon Lorne,Joe Martino,Ranalli Gina,Anthony Giangregorio,Rebecca Besser,Frank Dirscherl,A.P. Fuchs

Tags: #Horror

BOOK: Metahumans vs the Undead: A Superhero vs Zombie Anthology
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The Puppet Master stood tall in a dimly-lit doorway with his arms crossed and a twisted grin on his partially-mask-covered face. The dark green and reflective gold of his disguise added a festive air to his otherwise demure demeanor. Cold blue eyes seemed to glow with malice as he watched the Cowl swing above his undead minions. He cackled an evil laugh, shook his head, and walked deeper onto the scaffold, seemingly admiring the predicament the Cowl was in.

“They’re hungry, you know,” the Puppet Master said. “One slip and it’ll be the end of you, or maybe we can help you along a bit?”

Smiling again, he focused on one of the zombies. It froze for a moment, like its mind had gone completely blank and was being reprogrammed. With a flinch and a grunt, it came back to itself and marched straight over to one of the tables and started to climb up onto it and closer to the Cowl.

The zombie soon stood on the table and began clawing at the Cowl’s cape, pulling him closer and closer.

“You see, I can control them,” the Puppet Master said, watching with glee. “It’s amazing what the power of suggestion can do to a weaker mind, isn’t it?” He laughed again, throwing his head back in true, sadistic merriment. “The dead have very weak minds and are just lying around everywhere. I dug them up, and I gave them life again. Now they serve me and do my bidding, keeping me loaded with plenty of funds. And they never ask any questions or want anything for themselves, well, other than a fresh
meal
from
time
to time, and I’m more than happy to oblige.”

The Cowl kicked violently, trying to tear his cape free from the clawed hands of the zombie seeking his flesh.

“You won’t get . . . away with this,” the Cowl gasped, trying to concentrate on the zombie and break free of its grasp.

“Yes, I think I will,” the Puppet Master said. “I have slaves that will do anything I want and that can’t be killed. Who’s going to stop me?”

To prove his point, he raised his arms with his hands flat, palms facing down, and four more of the zombies went still and then snapped to attention, heading for the tables to climb higher as well.

“As long as they’re fed, they’re easy to control, over-willing to please, even,” the Puppet Master said. “Soon, I’ll control the entire city of
Gathton
and there’s nothing you’ll be able to do about it because you’ll be dead, providing meat for my army of the undead!”

“You’ll never rule
Gathton
,” the Cowl growled, now kicking out at two zombies on the same table as more joined the one that wrestled with his cape. “Not as long as I’m alive.”

The Puppet Master laughed. “Poor choice of words, Cowl. You’ll be dead in a few minutes.” He pointed to the rafters where the grappling hook held the superhero suspended above the undead crowd.

The Cowl’s eyes followed the Puppet Master’s gesture to see a zombie crawling along the steel beam his grappling hook was attached to, a knife clenched between its yellow teeth. It didn’t even notice the blade cut into its cheeks and dripped dark blood down on its friends. In moments, the zombie reached its target and started sawing at the thin wire with the blade’s serrated edge.

“You won’t get away with this, Puppet Master,” the Cowl said, still kicking and twisting in mid-air, barely keeping himself free of the hands eagerly grabbing for him.

Suddenly the wire snapped and the Cowl began to fall into the midst of the hungry horde of zombies. He twisted in the air and came down on the shoulders of an old woman. He flattened the old crone to the floor, the body cushioning his fall.

Some of the zombies staggered backwards with the force of contact as he bumped into them, and some of them fell over to flail uncontrollably on the floor. Jumping to his feet, he withdrew an eight-inch knife from a sheath attached to his thigh. He spun and slashed at the bodies around him, his training the only thing saving him from sudden death.

Bloated stomachs burst, and slick, rotting innards fell to the concrete floor with a sickening
plop
. The stench of decay filled the warehouse, causing both the Cowl and the Puppet Master to gag.

“Well, I never said they were the most aromatic of minions,” the Puppet Master said.

Stepping forward and violently stabbing the creatures, the Cowl advanced through the confused crowd of zombies toward the far wall, seeing a chance to escape the undead mob, but he needed to make it out of the press of dead bodies, organs, and severed body parts first. He just didn’t know if it was possible. He was still just a man, trying to right the wrongs of the world, and he began to wonder if he had what it took to save
Gathton
this time.

Out of the corner of his eye, the Cowl spotted a row of nitrogen tanks sitting in the far corner of the room, about thirty yards away. An idea bloomed in his overworked mind and he knew what he could do to get out of this mess, or at least stop the Puppet Master and his minions, even if it took his life as well.

With renewed vigor, he slashed and cut through the horde, severing heads with his violent swings, slicing through rotten flesh as if the zombies were made of papier-mâché.

They came at him one at a time, each blocking the rest from attacking in force, and that was his saving grace. If they had attacked en masse, he never would have been able to stop them from swarming him, but as it was, he managed to hold his own until he reached the far wall.

With a drop kick to the closest zombie, he jumped up and grabbed hold of a light fixture with his right hand, then pulled himself up, his other hand grasping on to an electrical box with three fingers, the other two still holding the knife. After pulling himself up some more, he sheathed the gore-covered knife and began to climb faster. The wall had many protuberances and it was child’s play for him to scale it like a ladder.

“Get after him, you fools!” the Puppet Master screamed at the zombies, who began to climb, their master’s control allowing them the dexterity to scale the wall almost as swiftly as the Cowl. Though controlled by their master, some were still too withered from the grave to climb and their hands slipped, their bodies tumbling back to the floor to splatter like overripe melons.

But for every one that fell, two more continued to climb.

When the Cowl ran out of things to grab, he found himself trapped yet again.

His eyes searching for an escape route, he spotted a thick, hanging electrical wire dangling from the ceiling ten feet away. At one time a light fixture had been attached there, but when it had been removed, some lazy worker had merely cut the thick wire and let it dangle. Or so it seemed. With the first zombie reaching up to grab his leg and pull him off the wall, he did the only thing open to him: he jumped and grabbed the hanging electrical wire, thus escaping the trailing zombies.

“Very clever, my caped friend, but not clever enough,” the Puppet Master said. “I guess I’ll just have to finish you off the old-fashioned way.” With a rage-filled snarl he pulled a gun from his jacket and aimed it at the Cowl.

Knowing he had seconds to act, the Cowl pulled his last
Cowlarang
from his utility belt and armed it, the small explosive charge in the tip filled with C-4. As the light began to blink, he swung himself around so he faced the nitrogen tanks, then threw the
’rang
as
hard
as
he
could. As he let it fly, he began to climb the electrical
wire,
bullets
already
ringing out around him. One clipped his left leg, causing him to grunt in pain, but still he climbed.

The explosive
Cowlarang
landed in the middle of the tanks, and though it didn’t penetrate the thick canister it hit, it did bounce off to fall at the base of them. Seconds later, the charge went off, rupturing more than half the tanks, the ensuing explosions tearing apart the rest.

Nitrogen gas began to flood the warehouse and a thick cloud rushed across the floor, swallowing the zombies whole. The Cowl managed to just climb high enough to avoid the frost cloud, but even so, his feet became cold as they dangled within inches of the mist.

On the scaffolding, the Puppet Master was knocked over from the blast, shrapnel from the canisters peppering him, causing him to drop down and shield his face. The zombies on the wall were knocked off and were soon lost from sight in the white cloud.

The Cowl hung over the white mist, waiting to see what would happen next, and as each second passed, the cloud slowly began to dissipate.

As he hung there, he looked down on eighty-plus statues, all frozen solid from the gas.

A gunshot pulled him from his stupor and another round sliced across his upper shoulder, causing him to grunt in pain. Turning, the Cowl saw the Puppet Master was up and trying to shoot him again.

Swinging his legs, the Cowl began moving back and forth, much like a trapeze artist. Soon, he was swinging wide, and with one final swing, he let go of the wire, flipped in the air, and came down on the scaffolding on bent knees, his weight causing the entire structure to shake for a moment.

“Curse you, Cowl, you’ve ruined everything. I’ll see you in Hell for this,” the Puppet Master hissed as he shot his gun at point blank range. It only clicked on an empty round.

“You should have kept better count, Puppet Master,” the Cowl said then ducked as his enemy threw the useless gun at him. It bounced off the railing to his side and fell to the floor below, landing on a zombie’s head. The head shattered into a hundred pieces, leaving the frozen stature decapitated.

“I’ll kill you!” the Puppet Master screamed and charged the Cowl. The lower half of his face that wasn’t hidden behind his mask was filled with rage.

The Cowl simply sidestepped him and used the villain’s momentum to push him away, but as the Puppet Master went flying past the Cowl, he lost his footing and ended up falling over the waist-high railing. As his body flipped over, his hands desperately reached out, grabbing the railing on its lowest rung

one of three

his legs dangling down.

The Cowl spun around and leaned over the railing, trying to grab the Puppet Master’s hands.

“Here, reach up to me. Give me your hand!” the Cowl yelled.

The Puppet Master began to laugh as his fingers started to slip. “You’d like that, wouldn’t you? To save me and take me to jail? Well, I won’t give you the satisfaction. Let it be on your head, Cowl—You killed me!” He let go, laughing as he plummeted the twenty feet to the floor below.

The cowl could only watch as the Puppet Master fell away, as if in slow motion, his body landing on three of the frozen zombies. The way the bodies shattered under the Puppet Master’s weight, one ended up having a large shard as sharp as a spear.

The Puppet Master’s laughter abruptly ceased as he was impaled on the frozen shard straight through his sternum. Spitting blood, he gazed up at the Cowl, even in his last moments on Earth, taunting the caped hero. As his head slumped to the side and the master joined his minions in oblivion, the Cowl looked on with stoic resolve.

“You reap what you sow, Puppet Master. I feel no guilt for your death,” he whispered, staring at his fallen foe.

Police sirens rose in the distance and the Cowl knew it was time to leave. Some security guard in another building must have called the police after hearing the explosion.

He needed to get to the roof, but he didn’t have his grappling gun. He would have to take the normal way, meaning the stairs.

Turning, he dashed down the scaffolding and into the section of the warehouse set up for offices. It only took him a minute to find the stairwell leading to the roof. He ascended it, taking the steps three at a time. It took a little over two minutes for him to reach the roof access door. It was locked, but one good kick sent it flying open to rock back and forth on its hinges.

As he charged onto the rooftop, he was caught in a blinding white light and heard the sound of a police helicopter overhead.

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