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by Unknown


  He stopped when he saw the Big Pipe. That’s what they’d called it—a huge granite culvert and cement pipe that ran under Addison, big enough to stand in when they were kids. They’d sit on the end in the spring and watch the water rush through, the level from the melting snow. Now, it trickled through, barely ankle deep.

  Lost in memory, Brian got out of the vehicle and scrambled over the rocks. In the forest, the leaves hissed. He walked through a patch of waist high weeds, twisting as they clung to his jeans. The weeds refused to let go. They squeezed tighter. The trees groaned.

  Brian looked down and screamed, thoughts of his endless childhood summers gone.

  Ticks swarmed up his legs, crawling over the denim. He’d never seen so many before, a moving carpet. Frantic, he tried brushing them off. Lyme disease, he thought. Oh fuck, I survived and now I’m gonna get Lyme disease.

  The weeds cinched around his wrists, coiling like snakes. That was when Brian noticed they were dead: brown and withered—yet still moving. Slapping at the insects (he could feel them all over him now), Brian wrenched free of the vegetation and started back up the embankment. There was a deafening crash. He looked up at the road—

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  which had suddenly sprouted a forest. Tall oaks and pines covered Addison, their roots serving as legs. Their limbs battered the vehicle, smashing the windshield and crushing the roof. Brian wheeled around and fled for the Big Pipe. A mosquito buzzed his face, biting him right below the eye. He glanced down at his feet and noticed that the insects were not only attacking him, but attacking each other as well. They’re zombies. It wasn’t over. It’s just spread to other life forms.

  If that was true, then he stood no chance. No chance at all.

  “No.”

  He dove into the culvert and crouched low, ducking into the Big Pipe. He’d been able to stand up inside it as a kid. Now he barely fit. Splashing through the water, he burrowed into the darkness. He still felt insects crawling on him, but he couldn’t see them. There was little light inside the pipe, just two small circles of daylight at each end. He stripped down to his underwear and flung his clothing as far as he could. Then he slapped at his exposed skin and checked for ticks.

  It grew darker.

  Brian glanced back at the opening. The daylight was slowly disappearing, blocked out by the vegetation choking the exits. Soon, it was pitch black.

  Brian Lee retreated back into his memories, ignoring the slithering sounds, creeping closer in the darkness.

  164

  MARCH OF THE

  ELILUM

  The Rising

  Day Twenty-Eight

  Florida Caverns State Park

  When it was all over, Michael Bland and his son, Kyle, were grateful to be alive. Before they’d gone underground, Mike, a 46-year-old divorcee, was a professional geologist with the Florida Department of Environmental Protection. His entire world had revolved around 14-year-old Kyle. When they saw each other (every other week as ordered by the court) they spent time playing World of Warcraft and going to the movies and just hanging out. When Kyle was at his mother’s, Mike, who had been married for nineteen years, enjoyed his independence. He didn’t date, and had no desire to start. One of his co-workers had once suggested that he “come out of his cave.”

  Mike stood blinking in the sunlight. He remem165

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  bered the comment, and laughed.

  “What?” Kyle asked.

  “Just thinking.”

  Kyle glanced back at the cave entrance and then to his father. “Do you really think they’re gone?”

  Mike nodded. “Sure looks that way. Maybe they’re all dead.”

  “They were already dead, Dad. They can’t die twice.”

  “Well, whatever it is that happens when you destroy their brain—maybe it’s finally happened to them all.”

  Mike and Kyle had taken shelter in the caves (only an hour from Mike’s home in Tallahassee) on the second day of The Rising. They’d burrowed deep into the subterranean network, hiding among the dazzling formations of limestone stalactites, stalagmites, soda straws, flowstones, and draperies. The cave was dry and air-filled, and a small spring fed by the Chipola River, provided them with water. They had sleeping bags and a kerosene lantern and other survival gear. By the second week, they’d run low on food, and Mike went out to find some. Despite the warm sunlight, he shuddered, remembering the horses.

  Florida Caverns State Park was also popular for horseback riding, and offered stables for equestrian campers. Some of those animals must have been left behind, starved to death in their pens, and then reanimated. While Mike had been hunting for food, the zombie horses attacked.

  He rubbed his forehead, which still bore the 166

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  scabbed, crusty imprint of a hoof.

  “Dad?”

  “Hmmm?”

  “What if we’re the only people left alive? What about Mom?”

  Mike felt a pang of regret. What if, indeed?

  Could they possibly be the last living humans? No, there had to be others, maybe hiding underground like they were, unaware that the zombie plague was over. He wondered if there were other fathers out there, battling to get to their sons or loved ones. If so, he wished them luck.

  “I don’t know, Kyle. But we’ve got each other. If there is anybody else left, they probably can’t say the same.”

  “I love you, Dad.”

  The boy rarely said it anymore, and Mike’s eyes watered.

  “I love you, too.”

  “So what do we do now?”

  Mike shrugged. “We go home. Carefully, until we’re sure the zombies are dea—gone. We’ll see if our car is still in the parking lot. If it is, we’ll take 90

  to 71, and then hop on I-10.”

  “Good. I’m sick of these caves.”

  They stepped out of the shadow of the cavern mouth and started down the trail. The treetops and grass swayed back and forth, rustling softly.

  “You know what I want?” Kyle asked. “Pizza.”

  Mike chuckled. “Yeah, now that you mention it. Beat’s those cold beans we’ve been eating.”

  They continued on. Twenty-seven days of living 167

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  in the cave had hardened them both, but Mike was still tired. Sweat ran into his eyes and he wished for a cool breeze. Despite his exhaustion, he felt good.

  “Everything’s going to be okay.” Mike mopped his brow. “We outlasted them.”

  Kyle didn’t respond.

  The plant life continued rustling.

  How, Mike suddenly thought. There’s no wind…

  “Dad?”

  Mike stopped. Kyle was pointing at something ahead of them. Mike looked. At first, he didn’t understand what they were seeing. An armadillo, still alive and not a zombie; lay twitching on a rock. A black cloud swarmed around it. The cloud buzzed.

  “Mosquitoes,” Mike said. “What the hell?”

  Kyle screamed.

  His legs had turned black, as thousands of ants crawled up them, covering his shoes and pants. Kyle slapped at the creatures and his hands came away covered.

  “Dad, get them off me!”

  Stunned, Mike beat at the insects, brushing them from his terrified son’s legs. Smashed ants littered the trail. Crushed, their bodies still impossibly twitched.

  “Oh Jesus…” Mike moaned. “They’re zombies. Kyle, run! Back to the cave!”

  Pushing Kyle ahead of him, Mike glanced back. The mosquitoes forgot about the armadillo and darted towards them. The trail was covered with ants. When he looked back toward the cave, the 168

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  insects blocked their path, surrounding them.

  “Dad—”

  “Get off the trail.” Mike shoved him onto the grass. “Keep running!”

  The zombies didn’t disappear, he thought. They just changed. It�
��s not the humans and animals anymore. It’s the fucking bugs!

  They ran through the grass, biting ants still clinging to their extremities. Beneath their feet, the grass moved. Yellow lilies stretched towards them, whipping at their legs. Overhead, the tree limbs groaned. The leafy canopy hissed.

  Mike tripped, crashing to the ground. Sprawled on the grass, he gasped for breath. Kyle stopped to help him and the mosquitoes surrounded the boy’s face.“Keep going,” Mike shouted. “I’m okay!”

  Mike felt the individual blades of grass probe beneath his clothing, entwining around his fingers and ankles.

  “Run, Kyle!”

  With one last, lingering look, Kyle did, speeding towards the cave mouth, frantically slapping at the hungry insects.

  Mike sat up. A vine wrapped around his arm and tugged. Mike tore away and sprang to his feet. More vines encircled him. There was a horrible, wrenching groan behind him. He whirled around and gasped.

  Slowly, ponderously, the trees were stalking towards him, tip-toeing along on their tendril-like roots.

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  Screaming, Mike ripped free of the clinging vines and fled for the cave. He leapt through the mouth. Cool darkness surround him.

  “Kyle?”

  His voice echoed back to him.

  “KYLE!”

  “I’m here.” Despite the boy’s age, his son’s voice sounded small and afraid.

  Mike’s did, too.

  They found each other in the darkness, and returned to their camp inside the cave’s interior. Mike lit their kerosene lantern, and they checked each other for damage. Both were covered in hundreds of insect bites, and the vines had left ugly, red welts on Mike’s arms.

  “Dad? There’s no plants in here, right?”

  Mike shook his head.

  “And bugs don’t live inside caves, right?”

  “No,” Mike lied, closing his eyes. “No they don’t.”

  At the edges of the lantern’s glow, the cavern floor began to move.

  Darkness scuttled towards them.

  Outside, the Elilum reigned over all. 170

  BEST SEAT IN

  THE HOUSE

  The Rising

  Day Twenty-Nine

  Cashmere, Washington

  “Something’s happening.”

  Chris Hansen put down his Stephen Crane collection and looked up at Francesca. She stood at the window, the sunlight reflected on her skin. For a second, Chris found it hard to breathe. She looked beautiful, even after living barricaded inside this house, with no showers and very little to eat. She was slender with long dark brunette hair and big brown eyes. The only thing missing was her great smile.

  Francesca hadn’t smiled in a long time. Chris nudged the sluggish wheelchair towards her. It was less responsive. The batteries were almost dead. And with the electricity out, there’d be no way to recharge them.

  “What is it?” he asked.

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  Francesca didn’t reply.

  They hadn’t seen a zombie for three days. The last one to approach the house had collapsed in the driveway, literally falling apart. The arms fell off and the abdomen popped like a balloon. When Francesca crept outside to investigate, she said the insects burrowing through the rancid flesh were fighting with each other. Chris had scoffed at this.

  “So what is it? Not more zombies?”

  She shook her head. “Something else…something…weird.”

  Chris was thirty-eight years old and had been a quadriplegic for the last eighteen. He had good use of his left arm (except for the fingers), but very limited use of his right. He could not feel his skin or use any muscles below his collarbone. Dead from the neck down, he’d once said. Sometimes he was envious of the dead outside. Unlike him, they could still move.

  He looked out the window, and gasped. The trees were dying. Their house sat in the middle of a flat square acre. As they watched, the grass died—and then came back. There was no clear way to describe it. Like a wave on an ocean, a patch of brown rippled across the lawn. In its wake, the grass then turned green again—but it moved. The grass moved, each blade waving like an individual tentacle. The same thing was happening to the trees—tamarack, pine, fir, and blue spruce—each died and was resurrected. They ripped themselves free of the soil and clambered away on their roots. Thankfully, none of them realized there were two 172

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  humans less than twenty-five feet away.

  “It’s spreading,” Chris whispered. “Maybe nobody’s going to come after all.”

  “They’ll come.” Francesca wheeled him into the kitchen. “The Rising is over. We’ve stayed inside for twenty-nine days. All we have to do is stay inside for a few more.”

  “Not like either one of us were social butterflies anyway.” Chris grinned, trying to take his mind off the strange occurrences outside.

  Before Francesca came into his life, Chris had barely left the house in over ten years. They’d met online when he’d purchased some books from her on eBay. Like him, she was reclusive, wading through and waiting on life. After three months of phone calls and emails, Chris invited her to visit. A month later, Francesca left the east coast behind and moved in with him.

  Every day since then was magic. Sunshine. Life.

  Chris felt alive with her.

  “I’ll make you lunch,” Francesca said. “It’s good that you don’t eat much. We’re almost out of food.”

  Chris ate little at mealtimes to avoid getting fat, which was a quad’s worst enemy (other than pressure sores and bladder infections).

  “What’s left?”

  She held up two cans. “Corn or Spam.”

  “Crap.”

  “You are always grumpy at lunch and dinner. Why do—”

  She screamed, dropping the cans.

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  “What?” Chris’s eyes darted back and forth.

  “What’s wrong?”

  “The cactus.” Francesca’s face was pale. She pointed to a small pot on the windowsill. “It’s moving.”

  Chris tried to stay calm. “The trash. Throw it in the trash.”

  She did, holding the cactus pot at arm’s length. Then she went through the rest of the house and did the same with the other plants. The philodendron’s long vines wrapped around her arm, the heartshaped leaves caressing her skin. When it was over, Francesca wept.

  “Maybe you’re right,” she cried. “Maybe no one is coming to save us.”

  “Come here.”

  She did. She sat in his lap. Chris’s cushion made a farting noise. They both giggled.

  He wheeled them back to the big window, and the chair finally died.

  “Well,” he said. “I guess this is as good a spot as any.”

  Twenty-five feet away, on top of a four-foot high hill in the front yard, was a huge waterfall with a pond. Water splashed over several big rocks that Chris’s father had put there years before. A huge, black cloud hovered over the rocks.

  Mosquitoes. More mosquitoes than either had ever seen. Another cloud, larger and darker, swooped down from above. Bees. The two groups began battling.

  “What’s happening?” Francesca draped her legs 174

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  over the side of the chair. “I don’t understand.”

  “It’s spread. Think about it. First, it was the humans and the animals. But that stopped. Remember the zombie that just fell apart on the sidewalk two days ago? That was the end of that…

  wave. But now it’s affecting the plants and the insects. Look. They’re going after each other, just like the other zombies did.”

  Francesca stayed silent. She shifted against him, and though he couldn’t feel it, her soft buttocks cradled Chris’s groin.

  “I love you,” he whispered.

  “I love you, too.” Her breath tickled his ear. She stroked his thinning hair
.

  Outside, the yard grew thick with praying mantises, ants, hornets, ladybugs, and other insects, all fighting to the death. The grass struck out at them, but the sheer number of insects was overwhelming. Francesca stirred. “Can they get inside?”

  “No,” he lied. “We’re safe.”

  Chris knew he should be afraid, but he wasn’t. He felt safe. Secure. Warm. He sensed that Francesca was beginning to feel the same way. She relaxed, snuggling against him. He wrapped his left arm around her.

  “You’re the best thing that ever happened to me,” he told her. “Do you know that?”

  “As are you. I’d be lost without you, Chris.”

  “I’d be lost without you, Francesca. You’ve given me so much. You taught me how to live.”

  “You taught me how to love.”

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  “You’re my reason to live.”

  They kissed for a long time. When Chris opened his eyes, the insects were crawling over the window. Sitting in the chair from which Chris had spent so much time, from which he’d viewed the world around him, viewed life itself, the two of them held one another and watched the world die. They were content and happy and unlike everything around them, their love was eternal. It did not die.

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  AMERICAN PIE

  The Rising

  Day Thirty

  Drammen, Oslo, Norway

  “I’m so glad you speak English,” the American said. “I haven’t talked to anybody alive in almost two weeks.”

  Trygve Botnen nodded. “I haven’t seen anyone either. Just the dead, and I don’t like talking to them. But yes, having visited forty-six different states in the last six years, I’d like to think my English is pretty good.”

  “You go there on business?”

  “Vacations,” Trygve said. “I’m the…I was the Vice President of ABN AMRO Asset Management’s real estate division, but when I went to the states, it was mostly for pleasure.”

  “Ever been to New York?”

  “Sure.”

  “I’m from New York. Came over here on vacation. I’m an angler. I’ve fished all around the world. Wanted to fish the Drammen River, all the way down to the Svelvikstrømmen. I rented a 177

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