Fall of the Risen – Week 6 – Clark

previousbeginning

“Clear away as much as you can,” I said while all three of my newcomers leaned into the truck’s engine bay and scraped zombie guts with gloved hands.

“This is nasty,” Romanda said. “All new people gotta do this?”

“Everyone, new or old, does their share of work. Maybe not this job exactly, no, but whatever needs doing. And right now, this needs doing.”

I sat down behind Dawn’s desk and put my feet up. I was tempted to crack one of her beers, but that was something that a man who valued life wouldn’t do.

“Uh-uh!” boomed Dawn’s recognizable voice.

I stood instantly, hoping she hadn’t seen my feet on her desk.

“You three are new, right?” Dawn asked.

They turned slowly and nodded. They looked too afraid to do anything else.

“Lesson one, don’t let people like Clark fool you into doing his dirty work. Everyone has to do their share around here, but a job like this is someone’s punishment. Get on out of here now, and get familiar with the town. Go on.”

They left the garage in hesitant steps looking from Dawn to me and back to Dawn again. I had to watch them go. I couldn’t argue, and I couldn’t talk my way out; not with Dawn still standing there.

After they wandered off, I sulked and dragged my feet over to the truck.

“You know I’m supposed to be keeping an eye on those three, don’t you?”

“Bah. Little time on their own won’t hurt them. They made it this far.”

“You know, if anyone else treated me like you do, I’d probably punch them in the face.”

“Try it, fat boy.”

I chuckled. She knew even if I was willing to hit a woman, I wouldn’t try. I didn’t know if she could kick my ass, but gut feeling told me not to try.

To my surprise, she laughed too.

“You want a beer?”

A laugh and a beer? How pitiful did I look?

“Sure.”

She sat and talked with me while I worked. We exchanged gossip, aired grievances with people around the camp, and of course, spoke reverently about those we had lost.

Nothing new for us. We each knew each others’ stories, but never seemed to tire hearing them. Or telling them. Seemed the closest thing to therapy in a world gone to hell.

Time slipped away. I cleaned guts from the surface, she’d remove a part and hand it to me to clean the guts from the inside. The more cleaning we accomplished, the more beer disappeared.

My head swam. It had been a while since I had sat around drinking. My tolerance was pathetic.

Dawn had begun putting the engine back together with the pieces that were clean. She pulled parts under the hood with her like a person putting together the last pieces of a puzzle.

I watched her grab a funnel and pour motor oil into the engine. The bottle she poured from was big, the stream I could see dropping into the engine was tiny.

I stared at nothing for some time. Long enough that I wasn’t shaken from my daze until Dawn finished her rebuild and started the engine.

She whooped. “Some days I even surprise myself. Wasn’t sure she’d ever run again.”

She ran over to me and threw her arms around my neck. She stepped back and smiled.

“You’re lucky,” she said, jabbing a finger into my belly.

“Never doubted you.”

We stood facing each other. I was locked in her eyes having no clue if she was doing the same or not really caring. That was mostly the beer. Any other day and I would have run from something that sentimental.

After some time I took a small step forward. She did the same. I had no idea what to do next.

“It’s late. I should go. Right?”

She hesitated.

“Yeah. We should both go.”

Together?

“I’ll see you tomorrow?” I asked. I should have said it differently. I didn’t know how without blurting, ‘you want me to stay?’ Maybe I should have said that.

“See you tomorrow.”

She rubbed a bit a grease away from my face with a thumb and then walked out of the large bay door.

My eyes were drawn back to the funnel. It was speaking to me. I grabbed it and ran across the settlement to Jack’s house. He had a house with a big garage and had been collecting every tool he could find.

Jack was working at a piece of wood with a block plane. It looked like a simple box, though he usually had a higher purpose for simple things.

“Where are the new people?”

“New people? Oh, right. They’re fine.” I waved a hand dismissively and used the other to raise the funnel. “Look.”

“What?”

“What do you see?”

“I see a drunk guy holding a funnel.”

“Excellent. Can you build one? A bigger one?”

“How big?”

I smiled and motioned in the general direction of the only entrance and exit to the camp.

“Big enough to go across an overpass.”

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Fall of the Risen – Week 5 – Clark

previousbeginning

I stood by the overpass, waiting for Gianni to bring back the new people I had to babysit, when Dawn found me. A cigarette dangled from the corner of her mouth and bounced with each step she took. Maybe it was the amount of time since I had been with a woman, but she made a pair of coveralls look damn good.

“Walking funny?” she asked.

“A little. Newbie patrol.”

“Looks good on you.”

“Could be worse. For a minute, I thought he was going to wall me.”

She went silent, taking a long drag from her cigarette. “You’re still going to clean that engine, right?”

“I said I would, didn’t I?”

“I’ll take it apart, but I’m not touching a single gut. You hear?”

“I hear.”

“Good. Enjoy your initiate hell.”

When new people entered Sisco, someone had to be their lifeline for at least a week. Someone to show them around, teach them the way we did things, find them some responsibilities, and just be around for random questions. It was also a week when new people were studied. If they weren’t the good person that they first seemed to be, or couldn’t pull their weight, it usually came out in the first week.

Jack came wandering by. I caught his eye and he hesitated before coming over to stand next to me.

“We’ll look at you,” I said with a smile. “I’m the one in shit and you still show up to help me with the punishment. New people are en route.”

He laughed. “I’m not helping. I’m searching for scrap wood. I’ve used all the stuff I had, and no one will give me any of the good stuff, but I just need to build something.”

“Dawn needs help rebuilding that engine.”

“I told you, I’m not helping you. Not with that.”

“Fine.”

“Incoming,” a voice called out.

They heard the outer gate open, along with two approaching engines. Two cars appeared at the top of the overpass and stopped. Four gunshots rang out and the inner gate began to swing open.

The first car came to a stop in front of Chase. Gianni leaned out the driver’s side window and laughed.

“No way! You?”

“What?” I asked.

“You’re gonna be mother bear to these cubs?”

“I like people,” I said.

“Bull. What’d you do?”

“The right thing.”

“Okay,” Gianni said. “Don’t tell me.”

His car kicked up dust as he sped away, the other car following close behind. When the dust started to clear I noticed three other people standing close by.

Like me and Jack, they were all choking on dust and trying to wipe dirt from their eyes.

“I’m Clark,” I said, once I could see and force words through my ragged throat. “I’m going to show you around.”

“Wes,” said the closest of the three. He was a middle-aged man. Balding. Looked more like an accountant than a survivor.

“I’m Romanda,” said the lady of the group. The term ‘lady’ applied in the technical definition. She was younger than Wes, but big enough to play professional football, if it still existed.

The third was something I hadn’t seen since the world went to hell. I was pretty sure it was a dude, despite the Florescent pink dress he wore. His hair was kind of long, for a dude, but he wasn’t wearing makeup. To be fair, most ladies in our world didn’t wear makeup either. Hard to come by.

He eyed me warily. When he finally opened his mouth to give his introduction, he was cut off from his chance.

“What do we have here?” Ferguson wandered over with a cruel smile on his face. He approached the young man and grabbed a part of his dress between two fingers, caressing it before letting it drop. “Looks like we’ve got a new candidate for prettiest girl in town. What’s your name, sweetheart?”

“Daffodil,” he replied.

Ferguson burst out laughing. “Truly a flower in this wasteland.”

I stepped between Ferguson and the newcomers, fists clenched at my sides, temper nearing its max.

“Ferguson, if you don’t leave him alone…”

Before I realized I had even moved, Ferguson was staring up at me from the ground with a hand clamped over his jaw.

“Dammit, Clark,” Jack said. “When you threaten someone, you’re supposed to give them a chance to straighten up before you hit them.”

Ferguson got up slowly, eyeing me. He made a show of dusting himself off. He summoned the little manliness he had and showed everyone he wasn’t afraid.

Without another word, he turned and walked away, stumbling every fifth or sixth step.

“Thanks for standing up for me,” Daffodil said. “But you didn’t have to. I’m used to people like that. That’s why I never stay in one place for long. It’s why I won’t be here long.”

“Hey, anyone who’s survived this long has been through some shit and deserves respect. Don’t forget that.” He gave me a nod. “Besides, it’s none of my business what you do with your weiner. Am I right?”

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Fall of the Risen – Week 4 – Clark

previousbeginning

I sat on the couch of Dave’s living room, feeling like I was in the principal’s office. His squad of security goons waited outside of the house. That was a small relief.

Dave slowly paced the floor, arms folded with a finger on his lips.

“You said you wanted them gone,” I said. “Trust me, they’re gone.”

“True,” he said with a tone that barely hid all the condescending things he wanted to say. “However, I never said I wanted you to risk your life, Jack’s life, and one of our trucks in the process.”

“We were never in any real danger, and that truck will be just fine when Dawn is done with it.”

“You don’t know that.”

“She fixed the one that rolled into the river, didn’t she?”

Dave nodded silently. That always shut him up since the truck that rolled into river did so because Dave forgot to put the parking brake on.

“What was the point of your little stunt?” Dave asked. “What’s your end-game? It seems to me that following the original plan would accomplish the same thing without destroying one of our vehicles.”

“My endgame? Hadn’t really thought much about that. But if I had to make a guess, I’d say my endgame is no more zombies. Ever. If I led that pack away, how long before they come back? Days? Weeks at most?”

“Maybe. Maybe they never come back.”

“Where else are they going to go? It’s not like I can tell them to sit, toss them a treat and expect them to stay.” I laughed out loud. “Well, the ones I left aren’t going anywhere.”

“I admit, there’s a chance they may come back, but there’s a chance they don’t. Maybe they wander in another direction, or catch the scent from another encampment.”

“Great,” I said nodding dramatically. “Let’s just make them someone else’s problem. Mighty human of you.”

“It’s not intentional. Plus, anyone who’s still alive these days can handle a few more dead. Probably the same ways we handle ours.”

“Leading them away?”

A look of relief came over his face and he held his arms out toward me. “Exactly.”

I stood quickly enough to make Dave take a step back.

“That means we’re all just trading zombies. How is anything going to get better?”

“So kill them? Kill all zombies?” He snickered. “There are only a few of us and a limitless supply of them.”

“That’s just it, Marshall.”

“Don’t call me—”

“It’s not limitless. It’s, uh…” I snapped my fingers, mind searching. The stupid word was on the tip of my tongue. “Finite! Their numbers are finite, which means they could all be killed.”

Dave took a few more pacing steps and grinned at me. “Finite, huh?”

I shrugged. “You ain’t the only one that reads.”

“You know I can have you walled for what you did today, right?”

“Sure. It’s not a very good reason, and people would ask a lot of questions. But that doesn’t always stop you, does it?”

That might have been a few words too many.

His hands went to fists and his face reddened by a shade.

I put my hands up. “Look, I shouldn’t have—”

Dave cut me off by raising his hand. A placating gesture. Calming.

“We got word an hour ago that Gianni and his crew found three new people. They’ll be here soon. I’m putting you in charge of their first week.”

I groaned, but Dave made another gesture and I thought about that precarious platform on the wall.

“You’ll still perform all your runs and whatever you can to help Dawn fix that truck. Fair?”

No. Not fair. But I had pushed my luck as far as it could go in one day. I nodded.

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Fall of the Risen – Week 3 – Jack

Today’s special Thursday post has been provided by my good friend and guest blogger, John Lasorda. Show him some love in the comments below.


previousbeginning

I measured my markings for the third time and began cutting out the spaces that would hopefully leave me with a perfect box joint. It was a lot easier since I found myself a electric jigsaw and a small generator all for myself. It takes away from my fuel allowance, but I’ve never used it all anyway.

I could have counted on one hand the number of times I’d managed a successful piece of furniture; successful meaning it stood upright and functioned within the strictest definition of the noun. It never looked remotely passable, despite its tenuous functionality. The feigned smiles and polite compliments of friends and loved ones notwithstanding, I enjoyed every splinter and uneven joint. I was—and still am—a terrible carpenter, but I enjoyed it.

As the jigsaw followed the lines I had drawn, my mind wandered. The camp had been having some minor hiccups with the water filtration system. Our secondary power generator needed parts, but the first was showing very little signs of wear. At least the walls were strong.

I wasn’t one of the chosen few who was “skilled enough” to maintain the systems, but these issues affected us all. A crock is what it was, but it wasn’t a bad life. Prior to the end of the world as we knew it, I knew more than a few people who had less. I can’t say I was one of them, but I was adjusting. I tolerated my position within the walls. It was better than living outside, and I came to enjoy making runs with Clark. They afforded us a degree of freedom geographically and in the materials that I came to view as a necessity.

Working at the last space in the piece, the jigsaw kicked back at me and I heard a gentle tinkling on the concrete floor of my garage. Broken blade. Dammit. I didn’t have many spares; I’d find more eventually. I didn’t know when, but I knew that I would. With most of the world turned into corpses, walking and otherwise, there were materials out there for those of us who were left, as long as I could find and transport them.

Clark’s “plan” was comical, and not without its pros and cons. His spontaneity and methods were ridiculous and infectious. Such absurdities were a welcome break from the monotony. He risked our truck to smash through a group of them while having zero exit strategy. He also failed, or neglected, to alert me to his intentions. These were also breaks to the monotony, but not welcome ones.

That was how it was with Clark. At noon Clark could be humouring me through my overly-descriptive explanation on the non-recreational uses for a stillery, and less than an hour later we could be wrist-deep—sometimes literally—in just about anything else, planned or not. For example, I first learned of his plan to put the group of risen back down when they collided with the rear of our pick-up. I learned of his plan to put the rest of the zombie population down shortly after his vehicular zombie-slaughter.

I pushed the pieces of wood together and frowned at the gaps of imperfection in my box joint. I shoved the project and my jigsaw to the side. Picking up my chisel and hammer I started on some fresh wood attempting a mortise and tenon joint.

I wasn’t sure how I should feel about Clark’s plan, but then, feelings are for fucking hippies, so there’s that. Clark was a solid friend and the type of guy who could do bodily harm to someone who pissed him off. To me—to most—a sustainable source of drinking water was more important than, “did you see that? Two at the same time!” To Clark, apparently not. I’ve made enough mistakes to know that I don’t always know when I’m making a mistake. Clark hadn’t let me down yet, and seemed to be a functional psychopath on his worst days.

Oh, fuck off.

I felt my blood run cold when I looked up from my mortise and tenon and saw Clark being escorted to Marshall’s Office. My eyes narrowed and my grip on my chisel tightened. People were regularly asked to see Marshall, maybe this was routine. A slight tremor in my hand and deepening of my breath told me that I wasn’t buying the lie I was trying to sell to myself. A full security escort was overkill unless a walling was on the table.

I hadn’t been ashamed of myself for a long time, but that old familiar feeling washed over me when I thought of leaving Clark to whatever punishment came from the meeting.

Nah. All of the blame belonged squarely on Clark’s shoulders. I wasn’t about to rush to his defense and risk the possessions I had amassed. I had just found four and a half lengths of mahogany, after all. Armageddon had its perks.

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Fall of the Risen – Week 3 – Clark

previousbeginning

When survivors started building Sisco, they began with an overpass. The walls were expanded to surround a lot of area, including a small suburb with houses in good condition, but that overpass remained the one way in and out of Sisco.

Both ends were gated, giving an extra seal between the our settlement and the outside world.

Jack and I were focused on pushing the truck as we approached, though I couldn’t help but to spare a glance up at the small platform built on top of the wall, just beside the outer gate. It was slightly larger than the seat of a chair. I held back a shudder.

On our approach, the outer gate split in half and each side swung open, shoving zombies away from us and the entrance.

We pushed harder, picking up speed. And not just to get through the gate faster; it was going to take a hell of an effort to get to the top of the overpass.

The truck threatened to stop near the crest, but we gritted our teeth and pushed with every muscle in our body.

“Incoming behind you,” a voice called out.

With guttural cries, we strained until the truck stopped pushing back at us.

I looked up at the guard’s booth where one of our security guards sat on his ass, watching. Ferguson. Security guard was a kind term. More like ‘gate opener.’

I called out to him in between deep panting breaths.

“It’s okay. Don’t help us or anything. It’s not heavy.”

“You should try driving it. Much easier,” Ferguson said. “Anyway. Like I said before: Incoming.”

Ferguson nodded his head toward the gate behind us. It was closed now, but two zombies had squeezed in.

This was the main reason for the double gate. Zombies sometimes got onto the overpass, but never into the town. Sisco rules stated that the second gate was not to be opened until we had put the zombies down.

Ferguson could have done it with his rifle, but he’d make some excuse about the cost of ammunition or the sound bringing more dead. That was fine. I still had fire in my veins.

Two machete swings later Jack and were loading the bodies into the back of the truck.

Ferguson still looked down on us like a school teacher looking at the ‘smelly’ kids of the class, but he hit the button for the inner gate.

“Make sure you take those bodies to be burned,” he said.

“Yeah, Ferguson. This isn’t my first time killing zombies.” I turned to Jack and lowered my voice. “Asshole.”

“What was that?” Ferguson called out.

“Nothing. Just calling you an asshole.”

“Right,” Ferguson said. “Get moving. I’ll let Dave know you’re here.”

“Damn it,” I said opening the passenger door.

“You kind of asked for that,” Jack said.

We pushed the truck forward until it began to roll down the incline. We hopped in and coasted through the second gate. Momentum brought us around the corner, but had to push again to make it to Dawn’s shop.

She saw us coming and walked away from her current job to stand and stare with her arms crossed.

“What the hell did you do to my truck?” she said.

“Sorry, Dawn,” Jack said, then turned to me. “And sorry pal, but you’re on your own.”

He turned and went. It wasn’t a run, but it wasn’t a walk either.

“Hey, Darlin’—”

“I know you aren’t calling me Darling. No one would bring me a truck looking like this and call me Darling.”

I laughed. It was forced, but I hoped it would turn into something genuine, or at least melt that stare that was freezing me to the core.

Dawn popped the truck’s hood and pushed it open. The hard look on her face turned to steel and she nearly killed me with a look.

“What the f—”

“I know, I know,” I said. “I’m sorry. I’ll make it up to you. You just tell me what needs doing and I’ll do it.”

She pointed at the engine.

“Clean all of this out of my engine. Only then will I start breaking it down, and I can promise there will be more guts for you the deeper I get.”

“No problem. I’ll do it.”

“And I want preferred treatment on your next run.”

“You just had preferred treatment two runs ago.”

“Are those dead bodies in the back of my truck?” she demanded.

“I’m going to take care of that, too. But you know the rules on preferentials. I give you another one this soon and Marshall won’t like it.”

“You know he hates when you call him that,” a new voice said.

I turned to see Jansen, head of security, leaning against the doorway, cleaning his fingernails with a knife. He must have thought it looked tough. Behind him were four more of Sisco’s finest.

Security was a pretty good job in Sisco. People didn’t question them and they got all kinds of perks. I would have liked to have been one, but they didn’t choose people based on experience or ability. They were chosen based on how malleable they were to the will of the self-appointed leaders.

They wore police uniforms stolen from a nearby station, not a single one of them earned. They each wore a gun on their hip. There was no such thing as standard issue, so they all had something different. And they all rested a hand on their provided sidearm as the eyed me.

“What do you think he would do if he heard you call him that?” Jansen asked.

I shrugged. I wasn’t scared of these guys, but I found that the less I messed with them, the faster they’d leave me the hell alone.

“Need you to come with me, Clark,” Jansen said. “Dave needs to have a word with you.”

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Fall of the Risen – Week 2 – Clark

previousbeginning

It was a long afternoon of pushing. It was only a truck but, if we came back without it, Marshall would be up our asses. Asking to take another vehicle to retrieve the first would have only made things worse.

Jack kept his promise and made me push by myself. For a while, at least. He sat behind the steering wheel whistling and smacking the side of the truck, demanding more speed.

Once he felt he had had enough fun, he jumped out and put his shoulder into the doorframe.

Within the first hour, Jack stopped, turned, and put a finger to his lips. He pointed to three zombies staggering around in the trees just off the road.

“Let’s keep going,” he whispered.  “If we’re quiet we can just roll by.”

I stopped and looked at the trio of dead. So few, so slow, so stupid. Sunlight always seemed to give us an edge. Seemed to affect their focus. The night gave gave the advantage over to them, or at least it seemed that way.

I grabbed my machete out of the back of the truck and stepped off the road.

“Why’d I say anything?” Jack asked the sky. “If I kept my mouth shut we would have gone right by them.”

“Nah,” I said, causing the closest zombie to turn his head toward me. “I would have smelled them.”

With a few running steps behind my first swing, I took the closest zombie’s head off at the neck. There was an extra bit of satisfaction watching the headless body crumple to the ground.

The other two noticed me now and began to lurch over. I barked a laugh as one of them tripped over a fallen tree branch.

The one still standing lunged toward me, even though I wasn’t in range. Stupid.

I brought my machete down on top of its head, nearly cleaving the skull in half. With a kick to the chest I pulled my blade free and waited for the third.

It was still pushing itself to its feet, snarling at leaves and twigs. I stepped closer and pointed my machete at it..

“This is what keeps us behind walls?”

Jack still had one foot on the road. He was holding a baseball bat, but didn’t look like he had any intention of using it.

“Come on,” I said. “This one’s yours.”

“Nah. You go ahead.”

The zombie pushed itself erect and reached for me. I shoved my machete through its stomach, planting the tip of my blade in the tree trunk behind it. The zombie was pinned, but continued to claw in my direction.

“Don’t be afraid, Jack. You’ve got this.”

“I’m not afraid. I just not as obsessed about killing them as you suddenly are.” He took a step closer, but just a step.

“Jack. You can do this.”

“Anyone can do it. I’ve got nothing to prove to you.”

“Don’t do it for me. Do it for yourself!”

“There’s nothing to—damn!”

I heard the sound of mud squishing behind me and then Jack launched himself forward, bat raised. I threw myself to the side, arms up to block the bat. I couldn’t believe I’d gotten so deep under his skin.

When I hit the ground I had a perfect view of the zombie who had just finished slipping off the end of my machete. It was much softer than I had anticipated. It had seen a lot of water.

It took one step toward me, arms out straight, when Jack’s bat exploded through the skull, raining chunks of skull and rotted brain all over me.

Jack stared down at me, chest heaving. He seemed to consider taking another swing, this time at me. After a moment he lowered the bat and turned back toward the truck.

“Let’s get back.”

My machete was still stuck in the tree. I winced as I grabbed the handle and felt eight kinds of gross ooze between my fingers.

When I got back to the truck we started pushing without another word between us.

It wasn’t long before we came across another pair of zombies. I stopped pushing and stepped off the road, machete in hand.

“Really?” Jack said. “Again?”

He couldn’t understand why I’d risk my life just to kill a few zombies that wouldn’t have noticed us go by. Before I had thought Jack was afraid of them, but as I looked at him I could tell he wasn’t. I don’t know what his objection was, but it wasn’t fear.

“I’ll handle it. You don’t have to come,” I said.

“No,” Jack said, grabbing his bat. “I’ll go.”

I killed one while he took the other. It happened the same way a few more times, without argument, before we finally approached Sisco’s gates.

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Fall of the Risen – Week 1 – Clark

We were living like cattle, waiting to be turned into cheap burgers, hold the fries. Not that fast food exists anymore. It wasn’t any kind of life for a man.

I had a house, was relatively safe, and was even getting used to electricity again. There was a time when all of that sounded impossible. Most people still thought it was a dream.

For all we knew, we were all that was left and existed behind a stupid wall. Huge slabs of metal and concrete cutting off our view of the outside world. To be fair, the view was nothing but thousands of corpses that walked, and reached, and moaned, and bit. The bite, of course, was the end of anyone who received it. Anyone still alive had lost loved ones to that bite.

I checked my rearview mirror and saw the large group of bodies still shambling after me. A large group for any one man, but it was still only a small part of the mass surrounding our walls.

It was only habit that made me look and see if they were still following. I didn’t need to check. My nose told me they were there. It was a combination of sweet and bitter that burned the nose when breathed too deeply. Like a handful of pennies mixed with vomit. It was a smell that we lived with every damn day. Some people claimed they got used to it, but they were the same people that kept smiling no matter what happened. People don’t go nose-blind to a smell like that.

Exit 63. Only three miles out with another seven to go according to our self-appointed leader. To him, ten miles felt safe. To me, there was no distance far enough. Given enough time, they’d cross the country to paw at our walls again.

Jack Lynch rode shotgun with me. Normally I’d be complaining to him about how stupid these bait runs were, but he already knew and he was sick of hearing me bitch about it. The run always made me angry, but watching those bastards shuffle toward us had me seeing red.

Beyond their numbers advantage, they were almost helpless. Most of them were falling apart. Missing arm, femur snapped in half, foot missing. One of them was dragging entrails behind it, occasionally tripping over them. Another had a large hole where its stomach should have been. Anything—anyone—it ate would just fall onto the ground. These things weren’t terrifying. They were ridiculous.

Even travelling at five miles an hour, I braked hard enough to make the pickup truck’s tires give a squeak.

“What?” Jack said, looking behind and then swivelling to check both sides of the road. He pulled his shotgun from the floor of the truck to his lap. “What’s going on, Clark?”

“Why are we afraid of these things?” I said, nearly in a whisper. “Who put them at the top of the food chain? Why do we give them so much power? Why do we have to plan every moment of our lives around them?” I was yelling by the time I was done babbling questions.

“Talk later. Go now. They’re right behind us!”

A thump of flesh and exposed bone meeting tailgate echoed from behind us.

“Clark Ellers, move your ass!” Jack shouted.

I yanked on the gear shift and hit the gas. We were stationary for a second while the tires squealed and then we shot backwards. If I closed my eyes it would have sounded like a crate of watermelons smashing all over the truck.

Jack cursed at me, but couldn’t keep his voice from quivering.

I thought it would have taken a while to get clear, but I was accelerating unhindered after a handful of seconds. The horde was now in front of us, what was left of them.

Those to the sides were already moving toward the truck’s new position. The ones that had been in the middle were struggling to get to their feet—if they still had them—while the rest had become a collective pink and brown smear.

“You’re not done, are you?” Jack asked.

I wasn’t. I put the truck into drive and took out another section of the horde. I ping-ponged between reverse and drive until I couldn’t see anything moving.

“Yeah!” I shouted, jumping out of the truck. “Look at that shit! Look at it!” I pointed at the puddle of goo as I walked toward it, but stopped when the stench hit me like a truck hitting zombies. I didn’t think that smell could be worse. I was wrong. Even that smell couldn’t take the smile from my face.

Jack stepped out of the truck much slower.

“Explain,” he said. “Tell me why you did that and I might not punch you in the face.”

“Don’t you get it? These ones aren’t ever coming back. Not in a day, not in a week, not even in a year. They’ll never pound on our walls again. Ever.”

Jack’s face said he understood what I was saying, but still not why I had done it.

“This is what we should be doing. No more leading them away. Kill them. Burn them. Done. It’s all reward, no consequence.”

The truck engine sputtered. We turned and watched as the truck rocked back and forth with the engine making more and more racket until the noise—and the engine—died. Completely.

Under the hood was a combination of metal and guts, nearly in even amounts.

Jack looked under the hood and slapped me on the back. “Looks like you’re pushing.”

next

“Okay, Hot Shot, what’s next?”

With the A-Z Challenge well behind me, you may be wondering, “What’s next?” What am I going to do to make coming back to jwmartin.com worth the visit?

Beyond posting a little more regularly, I have a few ideas.

The first is vlog posts. Staring at a camera and talking seems like it’s going to be awkward and something that’ll get better over time. But I also feel like it could be fun for me, and entertaining (hopefully) for all of you.

Secondly, one week from today I’ll be starting a brand new story that will be posted exclusively to this blog. Posts will appear weekly with occasional extra content that I’m very excited about, but I don’t want to spoil the surprise just yet.

I’m tempted to even keep the basics a secret until next week, but I wouldn’t want anyone to come back on Monday and feel disappointed. So I will tell you this: It is a zombie story.

There are a lot of zombie stories out there, and some people don’t like them. If you’re one of these people, this story may not be for you. Although, maybe it will be…

What I Learned in the 2016 A-Z Blog Challenge

2016 was my second year in attempting the A-Z Blog Challenge, and the first year that I actually completed the challenge. Here are some of things I learned over the course of April about the challenge, and about blogging in general.

Having a theme you like really helps

In 2015, I didn’t have a theme. Just wrote about something each day that corresponded with the letter of the day. That failed. This year, I wrote about Doctor Who. I completed. I’m not going to claim the theme was a direct cause for success—I can’t even remember what stopped me in 2015—but it was at least a contributor.

Having a theme gave me a starting point each and every day. It’s like having a car in the winter that has remote start. It makes going to work a little easier when you get to hop into a warm car.

Blogging every single day is tough

Most blog posts are meant to be short. Punchy, even. So, it’s not a lot of words to write per day, but it still ends up being challenging.

It may have to do with the due date being daily. If you take on a project to write 3,000 words in a week, you can write 1,200 words one day, none the next, then 700, then 900, etc, etc. As long as you end up at 3,000 it doesn’t matter when you do on the daily.

There’s also the gathering of images, formatting, SEO, tagging and linking to worry about. So, while it’s not a lot, it’s a lot.

There isn’t time for multiple drafts

With novels being my main/preferred medium, I’m used to having all the time I want with my manuscript. Another draft? Sure! Why not? It’s only another 6 weeks.

That’s not to say I’m one and done. I still make a few passes.

It’s built a habit into me

It’s one I hope to continue consistently. Not posting every day, but hopefully a few days per week. I have a few plans that I’m pretty excited about that are going to start in May.

Legendary Contest

With the release of Living Legend approaching (September 19th) we’re getting into all kinds of preparation for the launch party. All of our efforts have been to make it something fun and entertaining for those who come out to support. This launch isn’t just for me. I want it to be for everyone.

The only thing I want for me is for people to show up and read the book.

For everyone else, we’ve been looking into snacks, drinks, entertainment, and prizes. We always seem to be looking for more. One more thing to add. One more reason to come out. One more thing to make this launch really cool. And I just recently came up with possibly the most unique one, and I needed to share.

Anyone who signs up for my mailing list at jwmartin.com will automatically be entered in a draw. The winner of the draw gets to name a character in an upcoming novel. You can use your own name, the name of a loved one, or just a name you really, really like.

This is NOT limited to those who come to the physical launch party. You can take part no matter where you are in the world. All you need is to access jwmartin.com.

The contest will run retroactively (so if you’ve already signed up, you’re already entered) and the draw will take place on Sunday, September 27th.

Good luck everyone!