Sven the Zombie Slayer (59 page)

Read Sven the Zombie Slayer Online

Authors: Guy James

Tags: #Horror, #Lang:en

BOOK: Sven the Zombie Slayer
5.74Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

He tried to scream, but the scream never made it out of him.

A white hot pain, deep in his abdomen beat him to it.

He looked down in disbelief at the gnarled forearm sticking out of his body.

Before he could begin to wonder, Brian felt an unimaginable pain in his insides, and, just before his consciousness began to fade, he noted an unmistakable loss of pressure in his chest. His lungs were no longer drawing air.

Brian’s last thought as he sank into himself was that he would be dead long before he could suffocate.

The zombies made it true.

 

 

114

 

The shotgun dropped from his hand.

Sven could only stare.

He was far too late.

Brian’s eyes were closed, and Sven hoped that his friend was already dead.

There were zombies—dozens of them, hundreds maybe. Sven couldn’t see the end of them as they piled in through the open doors of the stockroom, trying for a chance at Brian’s flesh.

One of the zombies had a hand in Brian’s abdomen, pulling out his entrails and feeding on them in fitful spasms. Another zombie was working its fingers into the soft part of Brian’s neck.

Many more were pulling on his limbs, pulling in different directions.

If it was an attempt to quarter Brian, it was a failure…or rather, a partial failure. The zombies that had Brian’s right leg tore it off at the hip, falling backward with their prize. The zombies that had been pulling at the other parts of Brian’s body fell in the opposite direction, apparently pulling too hard now that the zombies on the leg were no longer a part of the gruesome tug of war.

More zombies emerged from the stockroom, swarming over Brian’s fallen body, ripping, tearing, crunching, slurping, dragging away—

Sven drew both of the machetes in a single motion that the most practiced of machete-wielders would have envied.

Then the dark clouds were there, blocking out the overhead lighting.

 

***

 

The trees bled, filling the space in which Sven stood with a revolting, palpable dread. He was holding his breath, trying to keep it out, trying to hold on to what was left.

Sven’s lungs began to burn, demanding. He wouldn’t let it, he couldn’t let it.

But the pressure outside of him was too great, and like a great dam bursting, his mouth opened and the blood-tinged air filled his lungs, replacing the burning with something far worse.

The powerful, limber woman reappeared, creeping out from behind one of the thicker trees. She ducked under a bleeding bow, putting a hand against the tree’s trunk.

She locked eyes with Sven, and took her hand away from the trunk. It was smeared with blood.

She glared at Sven as she raised the hand slowly up…up…and to her lips.

 

***

 

Now, in the Wegmans, the darkness poured into Sven, filling him, and pushing everything else out.

Fury.

Reprisal—dark reprisal.

Wrath.

He was breathing hard, like a beast, his whole body shaking with every mouthful of air.

Thought was gone.

All he could do was feel, and all he could feel was rage.

 

 

115

 

Sven leapt into the undead throng, landing in Brian’s still-cooling blood.

Retribution.

An inhuman ferocity gripped his body. He was the wild death, the bringer of the blade, the silencer, the ender.

Sven brought the twin blades down with an unassailable malice, feeling no pain in his body, feeling nothing but raw emotion.

If this was evil he wanted it…and more of it—to never leave this place, to feel it forever.

Two zombie skulls split open simultaneously, hacked down the middle, revealing grey bone and putrid brain matter. Chunks of flesh sprayed in all directions.

Each half of the torn zombie heads sagged away from each neck, opening upward like vile, twin flowers of the damned.

Then the bodies slumped and fell, and more zombies came forward, overtaking their fallen brethren, lunging for Sven, grabbing, gnashing their teeth and lolling their dry tongues menacingly.

Sven’s machetes never stopped, never slowed, as he plunged deeper into the undead that were falling all over themselves trying to get in through the stockroom doors.

The zombies snapped at Sven with their gnarled jaws, begging for decapitation, and he and his discolored machetes obliged…gladly.

Sven reveled in the frenzy, letting his anger feed and grow stronger through his eyes.

He absorbed the carnage before him as if he were a man who would never see again, who needed to imprint the vision of the world into his soul.

Gobbets of putrid flesh flew and zombies fell, limbless, headless, bodies torn asunder with a fury not of this world.

Sven’s darkness feasted on one sight in particular, in addition to the dual cleaved zombie heads with which he had begun his offensive. Once, twice, three—no—numberless times he slashed down on a zombie head in profile, chopping off the front part of the head so that everything in front of a cut section of brain and remaining back piece of jaw were gone.

Staring into the thing that remained—a strange device hanging with no ascertainable purpose atop a rotten, lifeless body…was…sublime.

As Sven leapt and cleaved and left sliced-open shells containing zombie brains in his wake, fighting his way deeper now into the stockroom, to the source of the zombies, holes—large ones—sometimes appeared in the zombie heads around him and the zombies fell, and in his frenzied state, he didn’t know why it was happening, just that it was, and that it was good.

Sometimes the zombies’ heads just disappeared. The darkness must have been outside of him too, helping him, feeding itself without vehicle, shaping itself through the air.

Wrath.

Then a different feeling came—one that didn’t really belong with the others. It was a calm, gentle feeling, and it touched Sven within the melee. It was a calm like none he had ever felt before, as if he were moving in slow motion in a certain structure, in a clear harmony within the violence.

Pure, unrestrained fury.

More holes appeared in the zombies around him, and more fell victim to his mottled blades.

The zombies began to thin, and then all of the ones inside the stockroom had fallen.

When it was over, Sven stood in the middle of a mass of hacked and slashed zombie flesh, lopsided chunks and gobbets surrounding him, as if he had been at the center of a great zombie combine.

And he had been.

Some of Sven’s normal feelings began to return to him, but they were dull, like unpolished, rough pieces of crumbling rock compared to what he had just experienced.

He turned around. Lorie and Jane were watching him. There was fear in their eyes, or maybe it was just apprehension. Whatever it was, it was directed at him. Sven felt shame for a moment, but then that feeling, coarse as it now felt, darted away, as if launched by its incongruence with the receding darkness, and was gone.

Sven wiped his machete blades on some of the fallen zombies’ clothing, and sheathed the blades. He wiped the sweat from his face and began to walk toward Jane and Lorie. Jane was holstering her gun—the big one.

They backed away as he drew nearer. The girl raised a hand up in front of her face, as if to protect herself. From him?

He stood there, watching them for a moment—watching them watching him.

“What is it?” Sven asked once his panting was under control. He felt a twitch in his jaw and neck, and tried to stifle it.

He heard something, whirled, and saw that another zombie had begun to stagger in through the—

It hadn’t registered before. The way the zombies had gotten in, they hadn’t forced their way in as Sven had assumed, they had…but how could that be?

Lorie and Jane came closer, apparently seeing what so perplexed Sven.

Lorie’s voice came muffled from behind her surgical mask. “How could one of
them
do
that?
They can’t even get out of cars or open doors, how could they?

“We have to get out of here,” Jane said in a stern voice. “We have to go
now.

Right on cue, as if they were on the set of a horror movie, a tearing, rending sound came from a distant part of the supermarket. Sven couldn’t hear the moans, but he was sure the zombies would be coming.

The stockroom began to swim, and Sven suddenly felt like he was sinking.

Too late, he realized that he didn’t have his mask on, and then his body went numb.

 

 

116

 

Sven fell, landing on a severed arm. The bloodless stump shot upward, as if telling Jane that her demise was now as certain as the separation between the arm and its previous owner. This was it, the zombies were overrunning the supermarket, Sven was gone, no way out, death—

“Help me get him out of here,” Lorie said, jolting Jane into action.

They grabbed Sven by the arms and dragged him out of the stockroom. Jane tried to ignore all the zombies and zombie parts that they brushed against and pulled Sven over to get out of that room. The jumble of parts made Jane’s own death seem so inevitable...to think she would soon join them.

She looked at Sven. His face, now extremely pale, was twitching violently. The thought pattern that had struck her when Evan was ill was now revisiting her, and though she tried to put it out of her mind—she couldn’t see any wounds on Sven, any sign that he had been bitten—the thought pattern didn’t yield.

Jane looked down at Sven, willing him to wake up, to wake up and to be alright. Her mind flashed on a picture of him just moments earlier, overtaken by some kind of violent rage. He had been so terrifying, but he had lashed out only against the zombies, and his protective instinct remained intact throughout the carnage. She felt a pang of longing when she recalled how he had shielded her and Lorie with his body when the zombies were on the verge of grabbing them.

If only he would wake up!

Jane shook him, and his head began to move. Ivan was there too, lapping at Sven’s face, prodding Sven’s head with his paw.

Sven came to, looking like death. “Back there…did you see?”

Jane nodded. “Yes, but there’s no time for that now. We have to go...I think they’re getting in, not just there but in other places.”

“They are,” Lorie agreed. “They’re in at the side door, I can see them.”

Other books

A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry
Half Discovered Wings by David Brookes
Burnout by Vrettos, Adrienne Maria
Masterharper of Pern by Anne McCaffrey
Blackout by Ragnar Jónasson
Protecting Marie by Kevin Henkes
(Never) Again by Theresa Paolo
The Ophelia Cut by John Lescroart