by Rich Hawkins
“Is it still after us?” Pike’s movements were quick and erratic. He kept muttering under his breath.
“There’re many things after us tonight, Private.”
“Very true,” said Frank.
“Contact!” Sibbick sighted a roaming infected coming towards them. He fired three rounds.
The infected man flopped to the pavement like a boned fish.
“Keep moving,” said Guppy. “We need to get out of Horsham before the bombs hit. Other units will try to regroup outside the town.”
“Sounds easy,” said Pike. He gunned down a naked woman running at him.
They moved past dead soldiers. This is where the battle for Horsham had taken place. Frank sensed the soldiers stiffen. There were abandoned checkpoints to the safe zone. Broken barricades and toppled sawhorses. Spent shell casings on the road. An armoured vehicle was burning, throwing light upon the faces of the dead at their feet.
Frank slipped in a mush of blood and slick remains. He pulled Florence with him. He would not let her fall behind.
Burning cars lined the street, painting the houses with the colour of flame. Shapes flitted through the smoke. The soldiers slowed, rifles aimed into the grey haze.
“Steady, lads,” Guppy muttered. “Steady as you go.”
An infected man with both arms deformed into tendrils emerged from the smoke. Guppy put him down; two rounds to the chest and one to the head.
“Did you see his fucking arms?” said Pike. “Mutants. Fucking maniacs.”
More infected came out of the smoke. Rasping, snapping mouths and grabbing fingers.
“Check your targets, lads,” Guppy said.
Sibbick and Pike sighted the approaching infected. Fired. Short bursts. The infected went down.
Frank kept hold of Florence.
“Contact!” Pike shouted as a little girl sprinted across the street. He fired. The bullets took her in the chest and throat, and she fell. Pike walked to the girl and stood over her, shaking his head.
“Fuck’s sake,” said Sibbick. “I hate it when the kids get it.”
“Oh shit,” said Pike. “Oh shit…”
“Focus, Private,” said Guppy. “Come on. She’s dead.”
“I don’t know if she was infected. I’m not sure. I don’t know. Oh fuck, I killed a normal girl. Just a little girl. A little girl...”
“Get a hold of yourself, Private,” said Guppy. “Breathe.”
Pike shook his head. “No, Corp. I don’t think she was infected. She wasn’t infected. She was normal.”
Frank looked down at the dead girl. She was no older than ten years old. The bullets had opened her throat. Her chest was wet and red. No expression on her face. He couldn’t tell if she was infected.
“Calm down, Pike,” said Guppy. “Calm down, son. It’s okay.”
“I killed a little girl. It’s all fucked. Everything’s fucked.” Pike started to cry under his mask.
“It’s okay, mate,” said Sibbick. “You didn’t do anything wrong.”
“Let’s move,” said Guppy. “We’re not safe here.”
“That’s the point, though, isn’t it?” said Pike. “Nowhere is safe.”
“This isn’t the time. Not now.”
Pike ripped off his gas mask, and his face was wet with tears. His mouth trembled. He was just a boy, really. Blonde hair and acne.
“Put your mask back on, Pike,” said Guppy. “Don’t be silly, lad.”
“We’re all fucked,” Pike said. “Nearly all of my mates are dead. We’re all gonna fucking die sooner or later. Like Gawen. Like everyone else. Like the lieutenant and Sergeant Baker. Like Matheson and Williams and Boyle. We’re food for the monsters. Either that or we’ll become monsters. There’s no point anymore. We’re fucked.”
Guppy lunged for the young soldier, but he was too late.
Pike stuck the rifle barrel in his mouth and pulled the trigger. The back of his head exploded. He dropped. Guppy shouted. Sibbick turned away.
Pike’s legs kicked and twitched, then went still.
Guppy stood over Pike, his shoulders slumped. He looked smaller than before. He crouched and took Pike’s spare ammo clips. He put his hand on the young soldier’s chest. Guppy straightened Pike’s arms alongside his body and whispered to him.
Sibbick came over and said goodbye to Pike.
Guppy stared at the dead soldier.
“We have to keep moving, Corp,” said Sibbick.
Guppy looked at Frank. “Let’s go.”
Frank guided Florence away from Pike’s body and the mulch of brain and skull fragments on the road. She looked back at him. Her face was the colour of moonlight. She was trembling and gaunt.
Sibbick took point. Guppy walked behind Frank and Florence.
They left Pike where he had fallen.
* * *
Frank heard far off screams. He ignored them.
“Nearly there,” said Guppy. “Anything, Sibbick?”
“Nothing, Corp. Just the street.”
“Good.”
Frank moved his greasy fingers around the axe handle. His limbs shook with adrenaline and dread. Screams and shrieks echoed around the streets. He looked at Florence and smiled. She looked away. There were more bodies here. One of them was moving, pulling itself along the ground towards them. An old woman with her legs severed at the knees. Her abdomen was bloated and puffy. She hissed at Frank. Her eyes were the colour of disease.
Frank kept walking.
“Keep moving, Frank,” said Guppy. “No point dwelling.”
“It’s difficult.”
“I know.”
“What is this virus?”
“Wrath of God, maybe.”
“You religious?”
“Not exactly.”
“What does that mean?”
“I believe He’s strictly Old Testament. I’ve seen too much to believe in a loving God.”
“Fair enough.”
They walked on.
Corpses had been piled against a shop doorway. Frank tried not to look but couldn’t help glancing at their faces. Cloudy eyes and mouths hanging open.
“Who piled them up?” asked Frank.
“We did,” said Guppy. “They were infected. We were trying to keep the roads clear.”
“I’m getting used to seeing dead bodies.”
“I have been for years. The first corpse I saw was a little boy in Iraq in the second Gulf War. He was shot accidentally by one of the lads in my squad. A high calibre round blew out his spine. He didn’t die straight away, which seems to be the way of things when children are concerned. Took me a while to get over it, but I did eventually, which in itself is quite disturbing. I’ve seen so many dead.”
Guppy glanced at Florence, probably concerned that he’d said too much to upset her, but she was staring straight ahead, holding Frank’s hand. She said nothing.
“I’m sorry about Pike,” said Frank.
“He was an idiot,” said Guppy. “But he was a good lad. He had a brother with Down’s Syndrome; talked about him all the time. He’d heard yesterday that the rescue centre his brother was at had gone silent.”
Frank opened his mouth to speak but he sensed something move above them. He looked up and it was gone.
“You saw that,” said Guppy. He raised his rifle and called to Sibbick.
They halted.
Frank scanned the buildings around them. The sky was dark.
“The creature that took Gawen,” said Guppy.
Movement above them. A flutter of flapping skin. The breeze touched the back of Frank’s neck with cold fingers.
He sniffed the air. The stink of wet rot.
“Contact!” Sibbick said and fired overhead, tracking it with his rifle.
Frank twisted his head around the street. Movement on a roof across the street caught his eye. Something was perched by the chimney, watching them. Glowing white eyes. Its body was coloured like alabaster. Its movements were jerky and quick, like a bi
rd. A low mewling sound came from its hidden mouth.
“I see it,” said Frank, his voice a whisper.
Guppy aimed at the shape on the roof. Before he could fire, the thing bobbed its head, twisted its sinewy body, and melted into the darkness.
“It followed us,” said Sibbick.
“Doesn’t matter,” said Guppy. “Keep moving. We’re too vulnerable stood in the middle of the street. We need to get out of here before we get our nuts roasted by the RAF.”
They moved together, sticking to the centre of the road.
A scrabbling on one of the roofs. Frank saw the creature’s eyes again. A flash of them, then they were gone.
“Keep moving,” Guppy said.
Then the creature came at them from above. It shrieked. A gust of air from veined wings. Frank saw its face, once the face of a man. Now it was a slick drooping mask. A saw-toothed rictus.
Claws sliced the air above Frank’s head.
Guppy and Sibbick fired at the creature.
“Where is it?” said Sibbick, looking down the barrel of his rifle, sweeping the rooftops.
“There!” said Guppy.
The creature was clinging to a wall. Its skin was almost translucent. It scrambled upwards out of sight. The creature could be heard moving over the roofs. A tile fell from a rooftop and smashed on the pavement.
“Wait a minute,” said Guppy. “I think it’s distracting us…”
Frank looked at him. “What do you mean?”
There were sounds behind them. The rush of a breeze and a keening cry. Another creature leapt from the other side of the street. A single flap of its wings and it was upon them.
The creature was streamlined and hairless. Its hands opened into filthy black claws.
It reached for Florence.
Sibbick flung himself between the creature and the girl. He fired his rifle. Florence screamed.
There was a maddening squeal. A shriek of pain. A ripping sound. A wet sound.
Guppy fell back and emptied the rest of his magazine.
Frank grabbed Florence and they rolled away. When he looked back the creature was gone.
Sibbick was lying on the road. His gas mask was gone, and so was most of his face.
He screamed through a ruined mouth.
CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE
The creature’s claws had been busy. Private Sibbick’s face, chest and stomach were missing bits. Deep lacerations. Most of the skin had been ripped away from his jaws and cheek bones. His eyes and teeth were starkly white against the red pulp of his face.
“It’s okay, lad,” Guppy said, on his knees beside the soldier’s trembling body. “It’s okay.”
Guppy tried to hold him together, but the best bits of Sibbick were falling through his hands. Sibbick’s screams faded into a series of broken sobs.
The creature that attacked him was lying sprawled by the pavement, riddled with bullet wounds. It had once been a man, naked and pale with lesions and tufts of wiry hair on its glistening skin. Large membranous wings curled around its limp body. Its face was a horror of teeth and soft meat.
The other creature had retreated beyond the rooftops.
Guppy pulled his mask above his face. He looked different than Frank had imagined. A soft, doughy face. A balding scalp. His hands were bloody.
“What’s it done to my face, Corp?” Sibbick asked.
“You’ll be fine. We’ll sort you out.”
“I can feel it inside me.”
“You’re imagining it, Private.”
“It’s in my blood. The filth from its claws.”
Guppy was dull-eyed. “No, we’ll get you some help.”
“You should step away, Corp.” Sibbick’s voice was slurred and slow.
The two men looked at each other. Guppy nodded, stood up and wiped his hands on his thighs.
“You know what you have to do,” said Sibbick. “We’ve discussed this. I’d rather be dead.”
Guppy reloaded his rifle.
Sibbick began to shake violently. His fingers raked at the road. A damp nonsense sound came from the flapping hole of his mouth and his eyes rolled into waxen whites.
Sibbick’s skin moved under his fatigues.
Guppy stepped back. Frank guided Florence to the other side of the road. He kept checking the rooftops.
Sibbick thrashed against the tarmac, tearing the skin from his hands. Now he was screaming, and it sounded like the screams Frank heard echoing amongst the streets of Wishford and Horsham.
Florence covered her ears.
Guppy turned his rifle towards the fallen soldier.
There was a single shot, and Sibbick wasn’t screaming anymore. His crumpled body looked pathetic on the road.
Guppy was an abject figure, cradling his rifle, staring at Sibbick. He looked old. His face sagged.
“They killed all of my lads,” Guppy said. “They’re all gone.”
More gunfire from other parts of the town.
Guppy looked at Frank. He said nothing. He relieved Sibbick of his ammunition. Guppy pulled down his mask, stepped around Sibbick’s corpse and started down the street.
Frank and Florence followed him.
CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR
They passed a pub with its doors hanging open. The coppery taint of blood drifted from the darkness inside. Frank thought he could see dark shapes huddled together, busy doing something, busy doing lots of things.
They hurried past.
“This is the road out of town,” said Guppy. He halted, looked down the street.
“What’s wrong?”
“Hostiles. Quite a few. Won’t be able to go through them on foot.”
Frank looked down the road. Scattered figures loitered and shifted in the moonlight, emitting low growls and mutterings. Some of them were staring at the sky.
“Don’t they ever sleep?” asked Frank.
“Haven’t thought to ask them yet.”
“Could we use a side street to go around them?”
“It’ll take too long. Haven’t got time.”
“What, then?”
Guppy’s gaze settled on a Ford Fiesta at the side of the street. He motioned for Frank and Florence to follow him. A man was dead in the driver’s seat. Guppy checked the man over then dumped him on the road.
Keys in the ignition.
“We’re driving out of here. Won’t make it out otherwise. I think the rest of the road is clear of obstructions.”
“Apart from the infected,” said Frank.
Guppy nodded.
“Will the car start?”
“Watch the road while I give her a try.”
Frank stood guard. He kept Florence close. Guppy twisted the keys; the engine spluttered and gurgled like something slowly rising from the dead just so it could die again.
Frank checked to see that the infected down the road hadn’t heard the sound of the engine. Luckily, they hadn’t, yet.
Florence looked up at Frank. Those small, dark eyes told him nothing. Her mouth didn’t move. He nodded at her, offered a strained smile.
After four attempts, the engine started. Guppy tapped the gas pedal, listened to the engine’s irregular throb and thrum.
“Get in,” he said. “I’m driving.”
Frank sat next to Guppy in the front. Florence sat on the backseat.
“Keep your head down,” Frank told her. “Don’t look out the windows.”
She nodded.
Guppy handed his rifle to Frank. “Look after that while I drive. Don’t shoot yourself. The safety’s on, but still be careful. Okay?”
Frank nodded. He held the rifle by his legs, the barrel pointing upwards. He swallowed to wet his throat. He noticed the tax disc on the windscreen was out of date by a week. A pair of miniature boxing gloves hung from the rear-view mirror. Old parking tickets around his feet. The smell of cigarette smoke had been absorbed into the car’s interior.
Guppy reversed the car into the middle of the road.
“
Put on your seatbelts,” he said.
Frank did so, and then checked Florence did the same.
The Fiesta started down the road, approaching the infected. They saw the car and bolted towards it, their eyes gleaming in the headlights. One of the infected men had been a police officer; his mouth contorted and peeled away to reveal jagged teeth. Whatever had made them human was gone. Many of them were all eyes and teeth.
“Maniacs,” said Guppy.
Frank braced himself, stared through the windscreen. He gritted his teeth, narrowed his eyes so that the sight of bodies being smashed aside wouldn’t be so clear.
Impact. The judder of limbs against the car being thrown aside. Terrible faces glimpsed for a second before they vanished. Screams of the infected. Something was caught under the wheels and crushed wetly like rotten fruit. A fleshy pop of skin and fluid. A body rolled across the bonnet and hit the windscreen, cracking the glass and falling away. Blood on the glass and hands scraping at the windows. The car jolted, its suspension grinding and clanging; Frank banged his head against the side window and his vision blurred.
The screams faded behind them. Clear road. The car was juddering and shaking. Frank hoped the car would make it out of the town.
He looked back at Florence. She still had her head bowed.
“It’s okay,” he said. “We’re safe.”
CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE
Horsham was burning. The sound of flames was like roaring wind. A firestorm.
Guppy parked the ailing car by the roadside, looking down at the town as the fire consumed it. There were muffled pops and booms. Buildings collapsed. Wood and brick structures were fuel for the fires. Detonations flashed and echoed around the low hills and fields. Red and yellow and orange rage. Smoke and flame. Incineration that was almost awe-inspiring in its devastation.
Billows of smoke reaching for the sky. The fire seemed alive; sentient and malign in its hunger.
Frank remembered taking Catherine and Emily to see fireworks on Bonfire Night at one of the fields outside Shepton Beauchamp.
He wondered how hot the fires down there burned. He thought he could smell roasting flesh. If he closed his eyes and listened hard enough, he could hear the screams of those trapped in the fire.