Read All Together Now: A Zombie Story Online
Authors: Robert Kent
Chuck has this thing for turtles and there were turtle pictures on every wall, some drawn by him. On his bed was a giant stuffed turtle, resting atop Kirkman's brand sheets (of course).
Chuck was sitting on the floor, two Transformers discarded at his side. He was sobbing so hard I could see his shoulder blades shaking and heaving through his shirt.
I didn't ask what was wrong. I sat beside him and wrapped my arms around him. Chuck buried his face in my chest until my shirt was wet from his tears, and still he cried.
And I cried.
I didn't hear Dad come in and didn't know he was there until his arms were wrapped around Chuck and me, pulling us to him.
"We'll be all right," he said. "You'll see. In the end, we'll be okay."
52
"COME ON, CHUCK!" DAD YELLED. On either side of I-65, people were running.
The dead lurched after them.
A woman in glasses sprinted between stalled cars, looking over her shoulder at the corpses chasing her so that she didn't see the high hanging side mirror of a motor home until she smacked her head into it hard enough to knock her down, her glasses skittering across the highway.
The dead fell on her.
"Chuck, now!" Dad called. "Get out now!"
I turned back to the cruiser. Chuck was sitting in the back seat shaking his head, his eyes wide.
Dad reached in through the open door to pull him out. Chuck scurried to the edge of the seat, out of his reach.
There were two zombies on the other side of a car separating them from us. Five more were approaching the front of the cruiser.
I raised my bat, which threw me off balance. If I'd swung it, I would've fallen over.
Dad put a knee onto the back seat and reached in for Chuck.
I stumbled my way to the opposite side and opened the back door just as the first of the five zombies shambled past the cruiser's front bumper.
Dad locked his eyes with mine.
"Keep him safe, Ricky."
He shoved Chuck toward me and I pulled him out of the car, nearly falling over with the added weight.
Zombies reached for Dad's ankles through the open cruiser door.
Three zombies cornered Chuck and me. One snapped its jaws at Chuck's fingers.
I yanked Chuck's hand back just before he lost a digit.
Dad crawled across the back bench and exploded out of the car, punching the zombie closest to us in the throat.
"Run!" he screamed, planting a hand on the shoulder of a corpse to keep it at bay.
I backed away until I was standing behind the cruiser with Michelle.
The zombie whose shoulder Dad held bit into Dad's arm at the same time another zombie bit into the side of his neck.
"Run!" Dad yelled. "RUUUNNNN!"
The dead closed in on either side of us.
Michelle ran, and I followed.
The rest is sort of hazy. I stumbled a lot, but I ran as fast as I could behind Michelle, the weight in my head flopping everywhere, Chuck thrashing in my arms.
But I didn't throw up. I didn't drop Chuck or my bat and I only fell over once, by which point we were far enough away from the dead for me to have time to get to my feet again.
I looked back.
I couldn't see Dad, but I saw the zombies that had attacked him bent over beside the cruiser. Feeding.
I kept running.
53
KEEP HIM SAFE, RICKY.
I've been staring at that sentence for the last 15 minutes. Or maybe 20. I've never needed a watch, but my phone's dead, as is Michelle's, so we have no way of knowing exactly what time it is.
If we live long enough, we'll forget what day it is, maybe even what year.
But we won't live that long.
Michelle's been pacing back and forth on the roof behind me and if she doesn't go crazy, she may drive me crazy.
Not that it matters. Our food supply is low, much lower than I thought.
I don't know where it's gone. I suspect Michelle's been taking extra rations while I've been sleeping, but I'll never prove it and she'll never confess.
We have to get off this roof.
I don't know how to get off this roof.
In a way, I'm glad Chuck's not up here with us. His skin isn't red with sunburn like my arms and face. His stomach isn't twisting with a hunger there's no satisfying.
Chuck doesn't have to sit up here knowing he'll eventually die of starvation, or have to face the horde of dead moaning on all sides of Ernie's.
Chuck's concerns are straightforward.
I've been watching him.
His shirt is ripped at the sleeve and somehow he's lost his left shoe. His sock is bunched up over the arch of his foot and eventually, if no one pulls it up for him, he'll lose the sock and then he'll be partially barefoot walking around all the broken glass from Ernie's windows.
He's been wandering among the much taller zombies, who occasionally trip over him or the catchpole hanging off his neck and dragging on the cement behind him.
He doesn't appear to have a destination. He simply lurches slowly from one side of the parking lot to the other, moaning and watching for signs of life.
The only difference between him and the other zombies is he's shorter.
And he's my brother.
Keep him safe, Ricky.
His hair is matted to his head and his face is streaked with dirt. His eyes are all white, of course, but his tiny face remains the same. His skin has started to rot and his face sags against his skull, but he's not beyond saving.
Not yet.
If I can get him to Kirkman's before the real damage sets in, he can be made well. I know he can.
He has to be.
Keep him safe, Ricky.
I have to get to Kirkman's.
I have to get off this roof.
And I will.
54
I'VE ONLY EVER BEEN DRUNK once. Last summer was a bad one for Dad. There were bottles all over the house.
One night in June, when Chuck was asleep and Dad passed out, Ben and I split a bottle of whiskey. I don't think either of us liked it, but neither of us wanted to admit it, so we drank the whole thing.
The next morning I couldn't remember much about what Ben and I'd done after the bottle was half gone, except I know we finished it.
My memory of leaving I-65 is like that night. I know there was a stampede of people running off the highway, and I remember Michelle and I ran with them, the dead lumbering after.
At some point, we separated from the group and Michelle led us into the woods, where I set Chuck on his feet because I couldn't carry him anymore.
I fell on my face.
Michelle shook me. "Get up, Ricky! We can't stop."
"I can't," I remember saying. The adrenaline rush I'd felt on the highway was gone. The weight in the center of my skull was spinning in circles and it spun the world with it.
"Do you hear that?" Michelle asked.
I couldn't hear anything except the dull roar in my head.
"They're coming! Now get up!"
"I don't know if I can."
Michelle slapped me and the ringing in my ears shot up an octave. "You and I are not going to die here," she said. "Your brother is not going to die here. Get. Up.
Now
."
The strength I saw behind her eyes gave me strength. It was the strength of a girl who's been forced to look out for herself and become her own mother. Where had it been before when we could've used it?
I held out my hand. Michelle grasped it tight and helped me to my feet.
Michelle led us, one arm gripping my shoulder to keep me going, her other hand grasping Chuck's. We walked through the woods, me stumbling and falling a few times, but we encountered no dead. Most likely they'd followed the pack of living and left us strays to get picked off later.
We came out of the woods into the backyard of a two-story brick house. We walked around their pool and I sat down in a lawn chair while Michelle banged on the back door.
When no one answered, Michelle peeked in the windows. "I don't think anyone's home."
"My dad's dead," I said and rushed forward to puke in the pool.
Afterward, I sprawled on my belly and laid my head on the ground to sleep.
The next thing I remember, Michelle was shaking me until I got up. She led me to the back door of the house and inside. The window beside the back door was broken.
"Whoever owns this house is going to be pissed," I said.
Michelle pushed me forward to a darkened sitting room. There was an enormous television, two recliners, and a big comfy couch. I sprawled onto the couch and closed my eyes.
I slept.
When I woke, the enormous television was on and the president was addressing the nation from the press room of the White House.
"What remains more powerful than any enemy is the spirit of the American people," the president said.
"When we come together as a nation, unanimous and impenetrable, there is no army, living or dead, who can threaten us. When we realize we are irrevocably bound to one another, we become one people, one nation, indivisible."
I looked away from the screen and saw Michelle was sitting in the recliner beside the couch. Chuck was in her lap.
"What time is it?"
"7:00."
I tried to sit up and winced. If I'd had anything in my stomach, I would've thrown up. I lay back down.
"Is there any Tylenol?"
"I can check," Michelle said. "How's your head?"
"Not good. You should turn the TV off before it gets dark, and also the lights. You don't want them to see the lights from outside the house."
Michelle nodded.
On television, the president was gone. A news reporter interviewed a man in an orange vest holding a large rifle. "These zombies are nearly indestructible," he said. "You have to kill the brain. Anything but a headshot may slow a zombie down, but only a bullet to the brain kills a zombie dead so it stays dead."
The screen filled with footage of soldiers firing on squadrons of dead and Michelle flipped the television off just as a zombie snarled so loudly I wasn't sure if it came from the television or inside the house.
55
WHEN I WOKE AGAIN, IT was morning.
Dad's dead.
This was my first conscious thought and I wondered, is this the way it'll be from now on: wake up, stretch, scratch, remember that Dad's dead, Ben too, and all the rest of them?
"Power's off," Michelle said. "So are the phones."
I sat up and a wave of agony swept from the back of my skull to the front. I put a hand to my head and groa—I started to write groaned. I straight whined. I'm no wuss, but it hurt.
"I found some Tylenol."
I held out my hand.
Michelle was sitting in the recliner to the left of the couch and Chuck was passed out on the floor. Cradled in her lap was a gun.
"I got you something stronger if you want," she said, holding up a prescription bottle. "It's hydrocodone."
I shrugged, which hurt my head.
"That's generic for Vicodin. Daddy took it when he hurt his leg. It's a pretty heavy-duty painkiller. So if the pain's not that bad, you should do Tylenol. But if it is, I'll give you the hydrocodone."
"It hurts bad," I said.
Michelle handed me the prescription bottle and a glass of water.
"There's a family that lives here. Just take one," Michelle said, seeing I had two pills in my palm. I put one back in the bottle.
"There's pictures of them everywhere," Michelle said. "Dad, Mom, and twin girls. But none of them have come home. I've been waiting, watching the doors, but nobody's come."
"Maybe they're staying someplace else."
"Yeah, right," Michelle said.
"We're not at our houses."
"True. Anyway, I found this upstairs," she motioned to the gun in her lap. "I figure, given what's happening, they won't mind if we borrow it. And some bullets."
I nodded. I never noticed how much I moved my head until it hurt to do so. "Do they have any food?"
"There's leftover lasagna in the fridge. Chuck and I ate it for dinner. You can't put in the microwave, but the fridge isn't completely thawed, so it should still be okay."
I stood to go to the kitchen and collapsed to the couch.
Michelle sighed. "Sit down. I'll get it."
I couldn't argue.
Michelle returned with a plate of lasagna and a fork. It was more cool than cold, but it didn't smell bad and I was so hungry anything would've tasted amazing.
"Thank you," I said between forkfuls.
Michelle shook her head as she sat back in the chair beside the couch. "I didn't cook it."
I sat up as much as I could. "No, I mean thank you for yesterday. You saved our lives."
"You would've done the same. I'm sorry about your Dad."
I set the empty bowl and fork aside.
"Before the power went out," Michelle said, "the news was saying there were zombies in France and England and, although the Chinese government won't admit it, they're people online who say there are zombies in China too."
"Yeah," I said, mostly because there isn't anything you can say to that.
"Yeah."
"Good thing your Dad's working on a cure."
Michelle looked away.
I heard a faint tapping sound, like the limb of a tree scratching the house on a windy night. By the look on her face, I knew Michelle heard it, too.
"What's that?"
Michelle turned to look. "Lay flat," she said.
I did, but not before I snuck a glance into the kitchen.
Just above the sink were double windows and through them I saw a dead man with long white hair streaked in filth staring in, tapping his fingers on the glass.
Michelle pressed herself against the recliner and I lay still on the couch.
Tap, tap, tap, tap, tap, tap.
We waited and the tapping stopped.
After several long minutes of silence, I stole a glance over the back of the couch and saw there was no one at the window. The dead man had lost interest and moved on—I hoped.