Gruesomely Grimm Zombie Tales
Page 1
Gruesomely
Grimm
Zombie Tales
* * * * *
By
Jakob and Wilhelm Grimm
And TW Brown
* * * * *
Cover by Shawn Conn
Panels by F. Baldwin
* * * * *
Gruesomely Grimm Zombie Tales
©2011 May December Publications LLC
The split-tree logo is a registered trademark of May December Publications LLC.
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, organizations, places, events, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons living, dead, or otherwise, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
This book is protected under the copyright laws of the United States of America. Any reproduction or unauthorized use of the material or artwork contained herein is prohibited without the express written permission of the author or May December Publications LLC.
Printed in the U.S.A.
Dedication
Dedicated to
Teachers, Tutors, and Students of the EOCI Education Program
Past, Present, and Future
* * * * *
Preface
The mash up. That’s what they’ve called this fad of making a classic piece of literature into something else…usually horror related. Some are already screaming, “ENOUGH!” And with good reason in some cases. However, I don’t think you can lump everything together.
Let me take a second to point out the merits of the mash up. There is an entire generation of readers who haven’t had the desire to pick up Jane Austen, Emily Brontë, or Charles Dickens. Hell, unless it’s the memoires of the latest reality show “star” or a gossip rag…many of today’s youth don’t read. Then…along came Pride and Prejudice and Zombies. Teachers wrote “Thank You” letters! My only defense is this: If a mash up gets one out of every hundred readers to poke around in the original…that is a victory.
The tales of the Brothers Grimm have always fascinated me since one of my babysitters read the story of Ashputtle, or as she’s better known…Cinderella. Suddenly, the story I knew but had no interest in because I was a boy—and thus…too cool—became amazing. Seriously…the ugly stepsisters were hacking up their feet to fit into the slipper. For a nine-year-old boy, that was a story.
Teaming with my artist, Farron Baldwin, I hope to eventually bring you, a reimaging of all 201 Grimm’s “Fairy” Tales. Some have been really challenging, others lent themselves nicely. I tried to include some of the spirit of the original tale, but I must admit that there are times when the title should proclaim: Very Loosely Based On…
I hope you enjoy the twist. This isn’t a true mash up in many ways because, while I may have brought along some of the original text, these stories often bare a minimal resemblance to their originals and carry only a hint of the Grimm’s unique and moralistic flavor.
I need to thank the usual cast of characters: Denise and Jenifer for making sense of my chicken scratch, and Dan Bluestein for all his help with editing and proof reading again…and again…and again; The Ralph Manheim and Margaret Hunt translations of Jakob and Wilhelm Grimm’s work, if you are curious about the REAL Grimm’s Tales, you can’t go wrong with either of their offerings; Farron for awesome art as always; and everybody who continues to offer their support and stick with me during the rough spots…I’m looking at you Chantal, Donna and Eric.
Your counselor is waiting
TW Brown
January 2011
Contents
1
The Zombie King
2
The Zombie and the Cannibalistic Voodoo Queen Shack Up
3
Hel’s Child
4
The Boy who Left Home in Search of the Creeps
5
The Zombie and the Seven Kids
6
John
7
Murphy’s Deal
8
The New Minstrel
9
Weird Science
10
Hooligans of the Apocalypse
11
Michael and Megan
12
Rapunzel
13
The Three Dwarves
14
Self-Centered
15
Timmy and Ginny
16
The Night Begins…
17
The Zombie Whisperer
18
Three Orphans
19
Greedy
20
Rennard the Courageous
21
Cindy Rallie
22
Erzats Ladies’ Man
23
Buck’s Blunder
24
Good Girl, Bad Girl
25
Violet and the Seven Zombies
1
The Zombie King
Based on:
Der Froschkönig oder der eiserne Heinrich
In Olden times, when wishing still helped, there lived a king whose daughters were all beautiful, but the youngest was so beautiful, that even the sun which has seen it all, was filled with wonder every time he cast his radiance down and felt it reach her face. Not far from the king’s palace there was a great, dark forest; and under an old lime tree in the forest was a wellspring. When the weather was very hot, this youngest and most fair princess went out to the forest and sat near the edge of the cool wellspring. And during such times as she was overcome with boredom, she brought with her a golden ball, throwing it high into the air and catching it. It was her favorite plaything.
Now it so happened that, on one occasion, the princess threw it ever higher and it failed to fall into the tiny, open hand which she was holding up for it. Instead, it fell to the ground and rolled straight into the water. The princess followed the ball with her eyes as it sank, disappearing into the murky depth. The wellspring was so deep that you could not see the bottom. On this, she began to cry; she cried louder and so as to be inconsolable. As she lamented, a strange sound found her ears. It could not be called a voice, but more akin to low moans and groans.
Still, in those sounds, the princess could hear the intent: “What ails thee, princess? Thou weepest so that it would make the foulest corpse claw from the grave and take pity.”
She looked around to see whence the voice came from and felt terror grip her tiny heart. From the inky black shadows of the forest stepped a zombie. Maggots writhed in one eye-socket and a hairy, black spider scur-ried from its mouth and vanished into the tattered rags of a filthy tunic.
“Return to the hole you crawled out from, dead one,” the princess cried, thankful that she was on one side of the wellspring’s stream, and this horrid monster the other. “I am crying because my precious golden ball has fallen into the water and sunken to the murky, black depths.”
“Stop crying, sweet princess,” the zombie’s moans and wheezes formed as words in her ears. “I believe I can help you, but what will you give me if I bring you your plaything?”
“There is much I would give, dearly departed.” The princess scrubbed away her tears, daring to hope. “Fresh clothes without spiders or maggots, strands of pearls and shiny jewels, even the golden crown I am wearing.”
The undead horror staggered forward a few steps. “I care nothing for clothes. Nor do I want pearls, jewels, or your golden crown. None of that will take away the chill of death or the coldness of the grave. I would rather feel the warmth of your love, feel something in my heart besides maggots. Allow m
e to be your companion and playmate. Let me sit at a table and eat from your golden plate and drink from your golden cup. Let me sleep in your bed and not under a blanket of dirt and pine needles. If you promise me that, I will go down and fetch your golden ball, returning that which is precious unto thee.”
“Absolutely,” she said. “I promise anything you want, if only you will go to the dark and murky depths and return to me my ball.” However, the princess thought something much different. What silly nonsense the zombie talks in his foul moans and groans. He is undead. How can he be a companion to anybody?
But once the zombie had his promise, he shuffled and shambled to the wellspring’s edge and stepped in. The princess watched, but just like with her precious golden ball, the zombie disappeared from sight. All that remained were wriggling white maggots on the surface. After several moments passed, a pair of shriveled, blue hands burst from the water and clutched at the edge of the wellspring. Slowly, the zombie drew up from the water, dark streams of filth running from it to pool at its feel. It plucked the golden ball from its one empty eye-socket and tossed it on the grass.
The princess was delighted when she saw her beautiful plaything. At once, she picked it up and ran away with it.
“Wait, wait,” the zombie moaned. “Take me with thee, I cannot run like thou canst.” He moaned, wheezed, grunted and groaned to no avail.
The princess did not listen. Instead, she ran out into the sun and forgot the poor zombie who had no choice but to return to the cold, lonely ground, for zombies come to fear the sun after years in the earth.
The next evening when she had seated herself at the table with the king and his courtiers, and was eating from her little golden plate, something foul and dead came shambling draagg-step shuffle, draaagg-step shuffle, draagg-step shuffle, up the marble staircase. When it reached the top, dead hands slapped and scratched at the door.
“Princess,” a moan carried on the wind, “youngest princess, let me in.”
The princess ran to see who was outside. When she peeked out the door, there stood the zombie. Slamming the door, she ran back to the table pale with fear.
“What is it, my child?” the king asked, seeing plainly the pulse of his daughter thrumming in her slender throat. “Is there a giant outside come to take you away?”
“No,” the princess shook her head. “It is not a giant, but rather a disgusting zombie.”
“What would a zombie want of you?”
“Umm, well…dear father, yesterday I was playing beside the wellspring in the forest. My golden ball fell into the water and made me cry. Because I was crying so, I apparently woke the dead and he got it back for me. Only, because he insisted, I promised him he should be my companion. I never thought he could travel so far from his grave. Now he is outside and wants to come in to me.”
In the meantime, the zombie scratched and pounded at the door once more. A chill wind seemed to carry the rank breath of the dead to the ears of all:
“Princess, youngest princess!
Open the door and let me in.
Dost thou not know what thou
saidst to me,
Yesterday by the cool waters
of the wellspring?
Princess, youngest princess!
Open the door and let me in.”
“A promise made is one that must be kept,” the king said. “Go, and let him in.”
The princess went and opened the door as she was told; the zombie staggered in and shuffled along close at her heels all the way to her chair.
Grasping a nearby courtier, the zombie tore into the man’s ample belly and pulled forth all manner of his insides. “I need a chair beside you,” the zombie wheezed, “so I can share your golden plate.”
The king ignored the dying screams of his cour-tier and nodded sternly at his daughter. She did this, but it was clear from her muffled gags that she was not happy about it. The zombie ate greedily, long strands hanging from his rotten, broken teeth. The princess tried her best to only eat in places where the bloody pile of innards had not splashed her plate.
Finished with his meal, the zombie pushed away, “I am tired now,” he moaned. “Leadest me to your room so I canst lay in a real bed.”
The princess began to cry. She pointed at the courtier who was sitting up now, staring at everyone with dead, unblinking eyes. The zombie beside her fumbled for her golden goblet and used it to strike the newly risen courtier in the head until his skull broke open.
“That is the only way to layest one such as I to rest,” the foul creature rasped.
The princess cried harder. She was more afraid of the zombie than ever. She feared he might nip her once they were in her bed. Then, there was the filth, it would ruin her silk sheets.
“Twice now he has helped you when you were in trouble,” the king said angrily. “You can not despise him after all that he has done.”
Fighting back the urge to vomit, the princess took the zombies cold, dead hand in hers and led the abomination upstairs. She pointed to a pile of filthy linens in one corner. But when she lay down in bed, he staggered over by the head of it.
“I’m dead tired,” the zombie wheezed. “I want to sleep in a bed beside thee. Let me or I will tell your father.”
At that point the princess grew angry. She grasped a candlestick from her nightstand and rose up over the zombie. Swinging with all her might, she smashed the creature in the forehead, sending him stumbling back into her mirror—which, up to this point she did not know was enchanted.
“Now you will get your rest, you nasty zombie.”
There was the slightest flash as he fell to the floor. But when he fell, he was a zombie no longer; he was a king’s son with beautiful smiling eyes. At her father’s bidding, he became her dear companion and husband. He told her that a wicked witch had bewitched him with an evil spell, and how nobody could have delivered him except she alone. The next day, they would return to his kingdom.
Then they went to sleep, and when the next morning the sun awoke them, a carriage drove up drawn by the eight white horses in golden harness with white ostrich plumes on their heads, and behind it stood the king’s servant, the faithful Heinrich.
Faithful Heinrich had been so sad when his master was turned to a zombie that he had three iron bands forged around his heart, to keep it from bursting with grief and sadness. The carriage would conduct the restored young king to his kingdom with his new bride.
Faithful Heinrich helped them both in, and placed himself behind the reins once more, overjoyed that his master was free of the curse, if only it were so for the many that now roamed the countryside that had fallen to his infectious bite.
When they had driven part way, the new king and princess heard a terrible cracking sound. The young man called out to his faithful servant.
“Heinrich, the carriage is falling apart.”
“No, master, it is only an iron ring. I had it forged around my heart,” Faithful Heinrich explained. “I feared it would break in two when you were bewitched and turned to a flesh-eating zombie.”
Once again, and yet once again as they travelled there was a great crack. Each time the new king thought the carriage was coming apart. But it was only the bands snapping and falling away from Faithful Heinrich’s heart, because his master had been set free and he was happy.
2
The Zombie and the Canabalistic Voodoo Queen Shack Up
Based on:
Katze und Maus in Gesellschaf
A certain zombie made the acquaintance of Voodoo Queen known to practice cannibalism and went on at such length about its feelings of love and friendship felt for the Voodoo Queen, that at length the Voodoo Queen agreed that they should take up residence in the empty shack out in the swamp.
“But we must make a provision for winter or else we shall suffer from hunger,” moaned the zombie. “And you, my ebony enchantress, cannot venture everywhere, or you will be caught by a hungry mob and torn asunder.”
The Voodoo Qu
een agreed that this was excellent advice and they stole a family of four from a nearby village. But they didn’t know where to put them. Finally, after much consideration, the zombie said, “I know no place where they will be better stored up than a nearby crypt, for no one dares venture where the undead are known to rise, and most other zombies are far too dumb to open such a heavy door. We’ll set them inside the crypt with a water barrel and crackers so they shall not die, and not touch them until we are really in need of them.”
So the family and the barest of supplies to prevent them from starving were placed in the cold, dank, dark crypt. But it wasn’t long before the zombie felt a craving and groaned to the cannibalistic Voodoo Queen, “By the way, black witch, an old friend from my living days will be joining the ranks of the undead and I wish to be there when he turns. Let me shamble off while you mix your potions.”