Domain of the Dead

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Authors: Iain McKinnon,David Moody,Travis Adkins

Tags: #apocalypse, #Action & Adventure, #End of the World, #Horror, #permuted press, #postapocalyptic, #General, #Science Fiction, #Zombies, #living dead, #walking dead, #Armageddon, #Fiction

BOOK: Domain of the Dead
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Domain of the Dead

Domain of the Dead

Iain McKinnon

Published by Permuted Press at Smashwords.

Copyright 2010 Iain McKinnon

www.PermutedPress.com

 

Introduction
 

 

Got your survival plan ready for the impending zombie apocalypse? I have. I know where I’m going, who I’m taking with me and how we’re going to get there. I know where I’m heading to pick up supplies along the way and how I’m going to lock my safe-house down and camouflage it and keep it isolated from the rest of the world as everything else falls apart.

But what happens if things don’t go to plan?

Let’s face it, how often do things in your life run smoothly? Even at the very best of times we all hit the occasional problem which knocks us off the route we were planning to take. If you think about it, it’s hardly likely to get any easier as we race headlong towards Armageddon! As doomsday approaches, what if the people I find myself standing alongside as we face the hordes of the undead aren’t the people I want to be with? What if they’re not strong enough? What if
I’m
not strong enough? What if I find myself stuck in a rapidly-emptying warehouse, surrounded by thousands of reanimated corpses, with a mixture of pensioners, young kids and other misfits and unknowns for company? What if the days of fear and isolation turn to weeks, then months, then years...?

That’s the situation Iain McKinnon presents us with at the beginning of
Domain of the Dead
—a small group of individuals who, somehow, have managed to survive against all the odds when just about everyone else has fallen and died and risen again. The (living) population of the planet has been slashed from billions of people down to just millions. When asked how they’ve been able to stay alive, the only sensible answer these survivors can come up with is, “we got lucky.” The question is, how long can their luck last?

My first taste of McKinnon’s work came in early 2009. Iain sent me an email telling me that he’d read the
Autumn
books, and that he’d written a zombie novel called
Domain of the Dead
. He offered to send me a copy, and he also happened to mention that he’d had a hand in a couple of short zombie films. He suggested I might like to check them out to get a feel for his work.

That afternoon I sat back and watched
The Dead Walk
, a ten minute movie made from a script by McKinnon. I was surprised more by what the movie
wasn’t
rather than what it was. It wasn’t like anything I’d seen before. It wasn’t your typical, cliched, hackneyed zombie story. There were no desperate groups of survivors trying to flee the infected, no gratuitous scenes of carnage, violence and gore, no attempts to try and show the world falling apart on a shoe-string budget... Instead, the film concentrated on a lone man walking through an eerily empty post-apocalyptic landscape full of sunsets and shadows, listening to the end of civilization through his headphones; snatches of emergency broadcasts, frantic government messages and desperate public service announcements forming the only soundtrack to his lonely journey. It was McKinnon’s ability to tell his story and drive it forward with limited action and without any direct dialogue or, indeed, a single conversation between visible characters, that made me sit up and take notice. If you’re near a computer right now, head over to YouTube and watch the film yourself to see what I mean.

But if McKinnon surprised me with his short film scripts, then his debut novel, the book you’re now holding, surprised me again. It wasn’t at all what I was expecting. With an apparently off-the-shelf “...of the Dead” title, all the old zombie cliches immediately sprang to mind, but that’s not what this book is about. Reading
Domain
made me think less about Romero’s “Dead” films and more about the loud, gruesome, bloody, straight-to-video monster horror flicks of the 1980’s and early 90’s. Think
Leviathan
or
Deep Star Six
but starring the cast of
Night of the Comet
.

This is a book which achieves exactly what it sets out to do; a quick, violent and exciting adventure that gives you enough explanation and detail whilst still managing to keep you guessing. McKinnon plunges us straight into his nightmare world with a breathless set-up and the pace barely lets up. Mixing the claustrophobia of
Alien
with enough blood, action and reanimated corpses to satisfy hardened gore-fans, I hope you enjoy
Domain of the Dead
.

 

Chapter 1: All the Townsfolk
 

 

Nathan’s eyes flickered a little as Sarah knelt down beside him, silently retrieving the sealed envelope from the side of his mattress.

“Do you hear that?” she asked, slipping the letter into the pocket of her jeans.

Nathan was too sleepy to register the enthusiasm in her voice. He just let out a sigh and tried to sink deeper into his pillow.

“Listen!” Sarah said sharply as she shook him.

Nathan hadn’t opened his eyes. “It’s just them,” he said, annoyed at Sarah’s persistence, and burrowed deeper into his sleeping bag.

“No, listen.” Sarah shook him again. “It’s something else.”

Nathan opened one eye just a crack and mumbled, “Like what?”

“Just listen!”

Scratching his beard, he let out a yawn. “It’s another fire.”

“No, it’s something else I think. It’s...” Sarah paused, almost too scared to say it in case she jinxed her hope. “It sounds mechanical, like an engine.”

“Seriously?” Nathan’s eyes were wide open, the shroud of sleep dispelled.

“Come listen,” she beckoned as she quickly made her way to the stairs. From behind she heard the unzipping of a sleeping bag followed by the sounds of a struggle as Nathan tried to hop into his jeans. As she reached the top of the stairs the slap of Nathan’s bare feet against the concrete floor echoed ahead of him as he rushed to catch up.

Pushing open the door, Sarah flooded the dim stairwell with the golden rays of morning sunlight. A sharp morning breeze caught hold of the door and tugged at her grip. The air was cold and damp, carrying with it the hint of rain. It was pure clean air carried here from the not too distant ocean. It cleared her nostrils of the stale musty odour of the warehouse below.

The wind’s bluster combined its own low moan with those of the undead surrounding the building.

Nathan appeared behind her at the roof door, his stained Nirvana T-shirt half out of his unzipped jeans. The jeans had rips where the wind undoubtedly whistled through, and Nathan’s shabby brown leather wristband just added to the shipwrecked persona. As the wind began to bite at his exposed flesh he brought his arms to his chest to conserve heat.

Sarah stepped out onto the flat roof, letting Nathan take the door behind her. She looked up at the azure sky speckled with fast moving clouds. Just a few minutes ago the undersides of those clouds had been tinged pink with the breaking dawn. Sarah stood at the edge like she had just a few minutes ago, but this time she was scanning the sky, looking to where she heard the noise.

Stepping up to the edge of the solar panels to stand level with Sarah, Nathan looked down at the mob filling the street below. Crowded around the galvanised metal fencing were hundreds if not thousands of zombies, their gaping faces staring unerringly at the warehouse.

They all looked the same to Nathan now, grey-blue faces, hair matted and grimy, dirt sodden and tattered clothing. Some had clay-coloured beards where the blood of their long dead victims had dried and stained. If he cared to look closely enough he could pick out clues to the lives they once had: a man wearing a firefighter’s thick protective jacket, a girl in a Burger Bar uniform, a children’s entertainer in what once must have been a gaudy patchwork shirt, a nurse, a businessman, a police officer. Little remnants of lives lost.

“Are you sure it’s not just them?” he said, eyes fixed on the writhing mass of rotten flesh.

Sarah didn’t answer.

Nathan looked over at her. Her cheeks, unlike the rest of her milky skin, had a rosy polish to them, undoubtedly from the cold wind. As he watched her, waiting for an answer, a tear blew free from the corner of her eye and forced by the breeze ran down in an arch to the side of her jaw.

For a brief moment Nathan thought to wipe it away for her. His hand had even started to rise before he stopped himself.

The wind changed abruptly, bringing with it the stench of the corpses below. It was like a mixture of fresh dog shit and rotting beef. Nathan looked down at the foul creatures and involuntarily flared his nostrils against the stench. The reanimated corpses jostled and pushed, trying blindly to negotiate their way round the fences that encircled the warehouse, the stronger, less damaged or less weathered barging their more wretched companions out of the way. It formed an unending conveyer belt of festering corpses. A few of the more functional cadavers had spotted Sarah and Nathan on the roof and moaned, stretching out their decaying arms towards them. Like the crowd at a rock concert they reached out with rotten hands as if they were that much closer or that much more prepared to embrace their desire. All aching to get into the warehouse. They never seemed bothered by their smell, or the weather or much else. The only thing they ever showed was anger—or was it frustration, Nathan wondered. The frustration that came from being denied a need. Being denied the chance to devour the survivors they knew were sheltering within this warehouse. Regardless of how maddened they were at the situation, they never went away. Once they stumbled their way here they stayed. Never lost patience. Never just gave up and shambled off. Maybe it was because there were no other people left to devour. Nathan hated coming up here. It always set him off. Locked inside the warehouse below, he didn’t have to think about how fucked up the world was. Just how fucked up he and his companions were.

“That way,” Sarah said, pointing off into the distance.

Nathan listened but all he could hear was the wailing of the dead.

“I don’t hear anything,” he said. “It must have been a building collapsing or something.” He rubbed his arms, bracing himself against the cold morning air.

Sarah stood motionless, staring out over the decaying town. She was trying to ignore him but she couldn’t. The doubt was pushing in on her thoughts. Had she really heard an engine after all this time? Had it just been wishful thinking? Sarah tried to recall the sound she had heard, to replay it in her mind, but it wouldn’t come.

“Sarah I don’t think... Wait.” Nathan craned his head forward as if closing the distance would amplify the sound. “I hear it now.”

Sarah thrust her arm out and pointed at a small black speck. “Look, it’s a chopper!”

Sarah’s yelp brought a wave of moans from the crowd below.

The distant chopper hovered over the abandoned office blocks, occasionally dipping gently or swivelling around like a dragonfly over a pond.

Sarah threw a triumphant punch at Nathan’s arm. The blow connected with Nathan’s bicep, bringing a wince of discontent from him.

“Yes!” Sarah stifled a shout. “Go wake up Ryan and the others! Quick!”

Nathan turned and ran for the stairs as Sarah stood and watched the speck.

 

* * *

 

Ryan stumbled through the roof door closely followed by Nathan.

“Do I hear music?” he asked.

Unlike Nathan, Ryan hadn’t taken the time to pull his trousers on. He stood there in the boxer shorts and T-shirt he had worn to bed, with only the excitement and a thin smattering of chest hair to keep him warm.

“The music’s just started,” Sarah answered. She pointed to the street and the shambling mass of decay. “They hear it, too.”

Peering over the edge, Ryan and Nathan could see the hordes of undead slowly lumbering their way towards the sound.

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