Box of Zombies: Rise of the Dead Volumes 1-3 (4 page)

The first of the jars held what first looked like gumballs
. But as Sam looked closer, he realized that he was hugely mistaken. Not gumballs but
eye
balls. There were a couple of dozen at least, bloodshot and staring, blue ones and brown. Some appeared healthy and others jaundiced.

The next jar contained what appeared to be tongues, going brown and shriveled.

Sam did not stick around long enough to look closely at the other two jars. He spun around and took off down the aisle and back toward the front door.

“Come on back, Sammy,” Mr. Tanner called to him as he ran
. “Come on back, you weak little fuck and put me out of my misery!  I ain’t man enough to do it myself!”

***

Sam was driving up Cemetery Road away from town when he spotted the girl walking along. She had a deer rifle slung across her narrow back. He recognized her shape immediately and smiling, he skidded to a stop alongside her.

“I’d know that ass anywhere,” he said to her through the open window
.

***

It was an amazing thing, finding Ellie out there, alive, heading back to her old home as well.

Ellie Johnson was his only real girlfriend before Katy, and the first love of his life
. She was the girl he would have married if her parents had not been so determined to keep them apart.

It had been almost five years since he had last seen her, but she had not changed one bit
. A green-eyed beauty, high cheekbones and a full, expressive mouth. Her mocha skin was flawless and still unlined.

They had gone together through most of their high school years and into college
. Until her parents decided enough was enough and sent her to France to study art.

Of course, he knew his own parents were relieved when Ellie went away, though they never allowed him to see it. He knew. All in all it was best for Ellie to end things with him
. He was barely sliding by in school and heading to nowheresville fast.

She rode next him in the Jeep, her rifle across her lap now
. Her clothes were dirty. Her curly hair was tangled and wild. He had never seen her looking less than perfect, and again the awareness of the situation was forced home once again.

“Been to your parents already?” he asked.

She nodded. “They were gone. All I found was this.”  She pulled a folded slip of paper from her jeans. “Says they went up to Charlotte to check on my grandma.”  She shrugged. “I doubt they made it,” she said, a bit too matter-of-fact for his taste. It made Sam’s heart ache, although he knew that the Johnson’s never liked him.

“You don’t know that
—”

“What about your family, Sam?” she interrupted
. “Your real family. Katy wasn’t it?”

Sam turned and pretended to look out the side window a moment
. He bit his lip and pinched back the hot sting of tears. Saying what had happened would make it real. It would make it final.

“I can’t talk about that yet,” he whispered.

Ellie touched his shoulder gently and they drove on in silence until they reached the house where Sam grew up.

***

Going back home for Sam had always been sweet because his mother always ran out to greet him.

Today, there was nobody to greet him.

His home was a big farmhouse, over one hundred years old. His parents had restored it with all the modern conveniences they could afford on the modest salaries of an elementary school principal and small-town newspaper reporter. White clapboard siding, blanketed along the front porch railing in sweet, fragrant jasmine that was home to more than a few snakes in the summer months. Azaleas lined the base of the house along all sides, bloody reds, pinks like cotton candy, lacey white.

He had always missed the sweet smell of home as much as anything else
. The shrubs, the grass, even the dirt from the recently tilled fields of cropland that surrounded his parents’ land.  

“Anyone here?” he called as he climbed the front steps
. Ellie followed, her rifle ready in her hands.

The house was as silent as a tomb, save for the
drip drip
of the faucet in the kitchen. It had always dripped, even after the remodel. His mother claimed it was their poltergeist. It only helped remind him of the horrors of the morning back at the beach cottage.

They moved from room to room, Sam now gripping his own gun and praying
he would not have to use it on his own parents. But he knew in his heart that he had already done the most difficult thing he would ever have to do in his life.

In through the foyer and living room, then the kitchen.
It appeared they had only gone out to the market for a loaf of bread or some milk. The downstairs was empty.

They moved upstairs, the boards creaky and lonesome under their feet
. Sam moved from room to room, growing more relieved with each passing moment. He couldn’t begin to decide what would be worse—finding the half-devoured corpses of his parents or his parents coming to devour
him
. But it was beginning to appear that his parents had fled just as Ellie’s folks had.

Finally, he made it to his old room
. It hadn’t changed any more than Ellie had. He plopped down on his bed and sighed, then laughed nervously.

“They haven’t touched a thing, have they?  Looks like they were expecting you back,” Ellie commented, stretching out next to him.

“Then it looks like they were right.”

***

They locked the house well and then returned to Sam’s room. They crashed and slept fitfully. Sam wept in his sleep and Ellie held him and whispered into his ear that things would be all right, though they both knew nothing was ever going to be all right again.

It was storming when they woke, and well into evening
. The darkness of the country was startling after being away for so long. People claimed it was quiet out there, but that wasn’t the case. It was noisy, but in a different way. A natural way.

Sam climbed from the bed and groped around blindly. “I can’t see a fucking thing,” he muttered.

Downstairs there was a sudden THUNK, as if a door slammed. Sam stood stock still a moment and the only sounds were the wind and rain and their frightened breathing.

Then another THUNK
. This one was softer. It was followed by footsteps on the warped floorboards.

“Oh shit,” Ellie whispered
. “What do you think that was?”

Sam found the flashlight he had taken from the kitchen and suddenly the room was illuminated with a soft yellow glow
. “Maybe the wind,” he offered, “blowing a door shut.”  Wishful thinking, but Ellie knew better. She picked up her rifle and moved to the door. She opened it an inch or so and peered out into the dark hallway.

There was a big window at the far end of the hall and when lightning flashed again, she could see the stooped silhouette walking slowly toward them.

“My God!” Ellie whispered, “I think it might be your father.“

“What? Really?
” Sam quickly yanked the door open brushed past her. “Dad?”

“No, Sam
. Wait!” Ellie cried, grabbing at his shirt. “You don’t know—”

“Dad?  Where’s Mom?  Is she all right?”

Neil Clark moved closer. He was bent, lumbering, his face shrouded in shadow. Sam opened his arms to embrace his father and as Mr. Clark leaned in toward his son lightning brightened the hallway again. Stark light touched the man’s face only a moment, but that was all Ellie needed. Face as pale as a blank page, dark lifeless eyes that appeared dusted over. Dried blood crusted his lips. His clothes were stiff with gore and Ellie could smell him, the stench of decay, the hot stink of death.

He bared his teeth and his dirty eyes rolled back into his skull as if he were in ecstasy as he drew his son to him
. He was going to sink his dirty teeth into Sam’s neck.

BAM! BAM!  Two shots and Neil Clark’s entire head was gone
.

Ellie stepped closer, her rifle still up and still ready. Sam was sprawled on the floor on his ass, as if he had been shot himself
.

“Goddamn!  Ellie?” 

Blood misted down, putrid and crimson-black onto Sam’s legs. It splattered the floor, the walls behind them, the smell of something spoiled.

Sam sat a moment, staring at the remains of his father
. He began to tremble violently. Ellie kneeled beside him and cradled his head against her breasts. “Shhh. Sam, we’re going to get through this.”  He cried a while and she cried with him, her face buried into his warm hair. She knew Sam was identified by those he loved. He was nothing now.

They both were nothing now but fresh meat
. And the world was starving.

***

Ellie wrapped Mr. Clark in a sheet and comforter from the master bedroom. She had removed the man’s belt and had clinched it tight around the covers. He was as tightly wrapped as a Cuban cigar.

Sam watched her
—emotionless, methodical. She was stronger than he ever realized. She would survive this if she stayed immune. If anything, he was slowing her down, putting her in more danger.  

“Just don’t look at it, Sam,” she told him
.

Together, she and Sam carried Neil Clark down the stairs and out to the back porch
. Blood had soaked through the covers where his head should have been, patches like oil on cloth.

“And don’t think of it as your father
. He wasn’t in there. You know he wasn’t.”

Sam nodded, sick to his stomach
. Ellie mentioned burying the body and it first it seemed a good idea. But then Sam wondered if the bright glare from the flashlight, the noise and movement might draw more like his father to the house. They decided to leave him for the night.

***

They found nails in the drawers of Mr. Clark’s workshop at the back of the garage and they nailed the first floor windows closed. They nailed two-by-fours at the base of the doors, making them impossible to open from the outside.

Exhausted, they crawled into Sam’s small bed
. He could not bring himself to use his parent’s room, although the bed was much larger.

Ellie found several candles downstairs in an emergency pack, and stood them on his dresser, nightstand and along the windowsill
. She lit them it they illuminated his old room in wavering orange and yellow.

Sam crawled across his bed to the shelf that was braced on the wall above his headboard
. “I think I may have something here that’s fairly valuable. Unless of course my parents discovered it.”  He laughed, remembering that his mother and father did indeed enjoy weed on occasion.

He thumbed through a stack of old paperbacks
. Horror stories—Stephen King, most of them. Little did he know back when he first read them, he would one day be living his own horror story. He chose
The Stand
, his favorite of the bunch—a big fat volume, well read by the look of the split spine. He flipped through the pages slowly.

“Ah,” he said, smiling
. He produced a flattened, crooked joint from the center of the book. “Look at that.”  It was a pretty sad looking thing, but it would serve the purpose.

He fired it up with one of the flickering candles and then took a long hit
. Holding a breath, he passed it over to Ellie.

***

It wasn’t long before they were pleasantly high. Ellie didn’t know it if was the exhaustion, or just the simple need to have their minds shut down for a while, but she could not remember ever feeling the effects of marijuana so quickly.

“Remember how we’d huddle by the window and smoke, thinking how clever we were?” She laughed and touched his chest
. “You’d always stuff a t-shirt along the bottom of the door so the smell wouldn’t seep out.”  

“I was so afraid my parents would find out,” he told her
. “Turns out they had a bigger stash than I did. Old hippies, you know,” he whispered wistfully. Then, sounding shy he added, “You know something?  They could hear us in here making love.”

Ellie felt her face grow warm with embarrassment
. “Shut up!”

“Yep,” Sam went on.
“Dad told me after we broke up. Said he couldn’t understand it, considering how well we seemed to get on.”

Ellie thought of Neil Clark again
—handsome, a bit flirtatious. Hilarious. Then the image of his stained teeth parting against Sam’s neck, his jaundice-yellow eyes rolling back like the eyes of a feeding shark, invaded her mind. She shook her head quickly, as if that would erase those thoughts from her mind.

For an instant, lightning brightened the hazy room and she caught Sam staring at her dreamily
. He was just as cute as he used to be, she thought. She wondered a moment what if...

She smiled and breathed out a thin stream of smoke
. The smell of the pot disguised the stench of decay left by the mess that had been Sam‘s father.

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