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TOPIC: The Park: Apocalypse (Story)


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The Park: Apocalypse (Story)
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My name is Jason. I am one of the few survivors of what is known simply as the Zombie Apocolypse. I spent the earliest part of the apocolypse hiding away in the basement of my home with tons of food and various things to do, soon after supplies went thin, and I had to move. I spent the next few months searching for food and a place to live, the unbelieveable darkness from the now smoke covered sky making night movement impossible. I moved only by day and eventually ran into a small town that was already half barricaded, with very few zombies stumbling around. I spent the next two months killing the zombies within, and adding small parts to the barricade, during this time three people in a group had all stumbled by and wanted to be help. I had no choice but too agree, they greeted me each with their names. Leon, Jill, and Albert, whom all used to work with each other in an elite cop unit. They had a couple of guns with them, atleast two to a person, Chris, holding three.

 

 

The four of us worked together and cleaned out the small area, not many of the infected persons, but just enough for us to know that more can, and will come. The place was very badly damaged, most of the homes were covered in blood, windows smashed. Hell even a car had smashed its way through what I could only call the Rec Center. We repaired all we could, windows were unrepairable without any glass, we had enough wood to repair most buildings other than the rec center. We drapped a few clothes across the gap and made it an entrance. The rec center had almost nothing, and we found a locked room. Chris conveniently smashed down the door. We found what most would call heaven, a small room that only contained two people, both...zombies. We killed them and found a large stash of medical supplies, and a few more weapons, and an old generator.

 

 

We brought all the bodies out to the front once the area was fixed up and presentable. We found a small green house out to the side, and we had a lake passing by the side with a mountain on flip side. We had defense from the water, and defense from the mountain, we believed. We built a sign out front naming the territory "The Park" dedicated to who we believed was the mayor of this town named Lincoln Park.

 

 

Things were going fine for the first few weeks, occasional zombie attacks nothing major, but soon after...new...creatures appeared. First of the few was what we could only call a "biggie" it's mainly just an overweight zombie, but the skin is much harder, and it was twice as strong, as seen when he smashed down the gate while we were sleeping. Most melee weapons were useless...we broke half our melee weapons, and it almost caught Albert while we were taking it down. Another was what we just noted as a mutated dog. It's extremely fast, and can jump extremely far...with that said it is also extremely weak, you could shoot it almost anywhere, and it will be completely immobilized. We are nervous as to what else might attack...

 

 

We lived in fear, and we knew we had to get the word out of our existence, Albert was very good with electronics, and once every saturday night, we would set up all flashlights we have collected from searches and aim them to the sky...hopefully someone can come soon....

 

 

One thing that soon came to realization was I had left my family, my father, brother and my fiancee... I cried for a few nights once this feeling hit me...I am now determined to find them, they aren't far from this camp we have built,  thank god for the map I found in the office... My town is only about two miles from here, hopefully i can convince a crew to come with me...

 

 

So here I am now, myself and my crew, running low on ammo...and most barricades are weak... we all stare at our soon death if others don't come... I am an average height man, long dark brown hair with now a slightly toned build... I ask for other survivors to please come...we are waiting for you all...waiting...

 

-------------

Note: it's almost always dark in the current time. Smoke from burning building, smoke from cars covering the atmosphere, etc etc.

You can also come to the Park before saturday, and then have your weekly post Saturday, I can write with you if you like, to collaborate, since i intend on writing every other day or so.

 

Welcome to The Park



-- Edited by DarknessLover on Wednesday 15th of April 2009 04:43:06 AM

-- Edited by The Ambassador on Saturday 18th of April 2009 07:13:26 PM

-- Edited by The Ambassador on Saturday 18th of April 2009 07:14:01 PM

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The Park: Apocolypse (Story)
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Apologies to all - I told you I couldn't help myself, I wrote 5 pages today and decided this version was the one I was going with. A few 'choice' words will probably get censored. Just a heads' up wink.gif

***

“This is suicide,” he said.


“If you’ve got a better idea I’m all for it.”


“Those things are in there.”


“How do you know that?”


“How do you know they’re not?”


Across the street a supermarket sat in silence. Its once automated doors were still now, frozen ajar, its windows shattered into glass fragments gathering dust on the pavement. The stench of spoiled food and death wafted out, tainting the already acrid air with a sour tang. Pressing the back of my hand to my nose I grimaced. My stomach continued to rumble. Beside me restless faces scoured the city street. Burnt out cars, trash, loose sheaths of paper rolled past with a short gust of wind. Above us the sky was dark and heavy. Rain had been falling on and off all day. Pools of sweat gathered on my face and were soon washed away by another downpour. It seemed to sizzle as it struck the cement. The street around us was silent save for the pouring rain. With a frown I cast a scathing glance upwards. I couldn’t even remember the last time I had seen a blue sky anymore – just one more casualty of the war and the dreaded gas. It all seemed like a lifetime ago.

 

Movement nearby stole my attentions as Rob crouched beside me. He shifted his rifle to his other shoulder. I smiled briefly thinking he didn’t have the face of a soldier. In another life he could have been anything, a model or an artist. With a small smile he cleared his throat and directed my attention towards the store.
“What do you think?” he asked of me. “You think we should do it?”


“I dunno,” I shrugged. I was tired, wet and hungry. I squinted through the watery haze and huffed. I found myself wishing I’d had the foresight to grab my glasses before I left, but with a shudder forcibly cleared my mind. The rain continued to pummel down all around us, masking all other sound, disguising all other movement.


“It’s the only store we’ve come across for miles,” Rob reminded, “it could be days before we see another one. If we get any lower in stocks we’re going to starve to death.”


Sudden movement startled us as David sunk to a crouch behind a nearby trashcan.
“If we go in there we could end up on the menu.”


“We can’t go much longer without food. We need water. Supplies. We’re not going to make it to the next town if we run out,” Rob reminded.


“Yeah, well we can’t sit around here much longer either,” David uttered. “It’s going to be dark soon. We’re sitting ducks here. Night falls we’re history. We can’t see s**t in the dark, may as well paint a god damned target on our backs.”


With a snort Rob glowered at the other man before he turned to me. His gaze slightly softened before falling away. Hesitantly his hand wrapped around mine. He didn’t have to say anything, it was written all over his face. Smearing my cheek with my fingers I felt my stomach sink – even beneath the water I could feel my bones starting to protrude more and more each day. My eyes were hollow and my gaze was slack. Over the last few days I’d been seeing more and more hair falling out on the rare occasion I untied it and let it loose. I was starving, we all were, but the dangers were everywhere. It didn’t seem to matter where we went their numbers were only multiplying while ours continued to dwindle. Six of us had left the city and now months later we three were all that was left. Drawing in a determined breath I forced a smile and nodded as if reaffirming strengths I felt I no longer had. He was right, we had to do this- but before I could say anything he was gone.


“Rob!” David hissed, “You idiot! You’re gonna get yourself killed!”

With his shoulders hunched against the driving rains Rob darted between the cars and upturned shopping carts and hurried across to the other side of the street. He disappeared for a moment behind a sandwich board still chained to a pole. Beside me David swore under his breath and shook his head. I found myself glaring at him. We watched as Rob surveyed the broken window before hurrying towards the opened doors and stealing inside.


“This is bull***t,” David muttered. He was gripping the shotgun in his hands like a soldier waiting in the trenches. Around us the street was still obscured behind a wall of water. We couldn’t see anything, all we could hear was rain thundering like applause. “He’s going to draw those f***ers out of hiding.”


“We should be in there with him, the three of us!” I snapped. I paused. “What was that?”

A sudden clatter to our right snapped us both to attention. Guns were drawn at the ready. Rain dripped from a hole in the rusted eaves above and landed in my eye. I recoiled. I was suddenly nauseous with panic. A moment passed; a long drawn out moment where I forgot to breathe. David moved towards the noise still in a crouched position. “No!” I tried to tell him but the fear in the back of my throat took the word from me. In that one terrifying moment all I could think of was being left alone in this alien street, in what was left of this alien world, being hunted to the ends of the earth with no hope in sight. It paralysed me. I couldn’t move. I stared at the water spilling between the buildings at a pile of detritus and the skulking black shadow of a stray alley cat. It glowered at us sheltered beneath some fallen Masonite. Slinking backwards it dragged its hefty prize into the darkness with it. It took me a moment to realise that it was not a dead bird in it’s maws but a human hand, at least it had once been part of a human, it’s dead fingers forever frozen into claws and was blue and black and bloated in a state of decomposition.


“We have to get the hell out of here,” David said, backing up towards me.


No sooner had he spoke than we heard it – the sound of crashing and a struggle coming from inside the supermarket. Rob was in trouble. Without thinking I found myself running full-pelt across the road, skipping the roadblocks like they weren’t even there with David in hot pursuit behind me. Before we had even reached the doors we heard an explosion – gunfire – and I skidded to a stop in the gutter. David snatched the strap of my backpack.


“Come on,” he urged, jerking me backwards.


“We have to get in there!” I argued, “help him-!”


“Now!”


“Rob! Rooooob!”

 

I screamed into the rain, into the cavernous mouth of the store that reeked of death and fetid food. Inside I could hear the struggle continuing. Punches. Falling. I waited holding my breath. My heart was exploding inside of my chest. Shoes squeaked across linoleum. Suddenly I saw movement. David continued to drag me backwards away from the open doors. Instantly Rob emerged, running towards us with blood blossoming down the front of his jacket. My stomach sunk with such force my legs practically gave way beneath me.

 

“Move!” David growled, hefting me upright. He didn’t have to tell me twice.


Behind Rob I finally saw them, two, then three, all gaunt grey creatures that looked like emaciated people but moved like something else. They growled and they spat as they chased Rob out onto the city street. Rob, having abandoned his backpack and gun in the melee was running fast but the things that followed were hot on his tail. One grabbed the back of his jacket with a skeletal hand. I continued to scream, maybe in my horror I never actually stopped. As Rob furiously struggled to wrench the jacket from him another came up and latched onto his arm. Bringing his elbow back Rob sharply cracked it in the face, but still they kept coming.


“F***!” David cursed. He raced over swinging the rifle up as he did so. With a loud dense thwack he pounded the face of the nearest creature and it staggered backwards, dragging Rob’s jacket, minus Rob, down with it.


“Thanks,” Rob gasped.


David swung his shotgun and raised the barrel, glaring at the other man with a bitter expression crumpling his face.


“Is that yours?”


“What?” Rob spluttered. He was hurrying towards me as David squeezed the trigger. The shot echoed like an explosion up and down the waterlogged street. Any chance we had of anonymity dissipated along with it. A creature fell but still others were pouring out of the open doors.


“Is that blood yours!”


Another explosion. Black-red blood flickered from the back of a creature’s head before it too crumpled onto the sidewalk. Glaring over his shoulder David poised his weapon as Rob’s step faltered. He slapped at the blood that had soaked in through his jacket to his tee shirt and shook his head.


“No. No, it’s not mine, I swear!”


“Did it bight you?” David demanded. He back peddled as he spoke but his weapon was inching closer to his companion dubiously. “I’m not f***ing around! Did it bight you or bleed on you-”


“I shot it!” Rob cried, “It fell on top of me! I told you it’s not mine now let’s go!”


Sliding an arm around me, Rob turned me around and together we ran through the driving rains as David followed, guns blazing behind.


We ran for what felt like miles around blind corners and into open spaces, hindered on all sides by the elements and the unfamiliar surrounds of a city left abandoned around us. We had no idea where we were let alone headed, but still we ran as if death itself were chasing us.


It was.





-- Edited by Ravynlee on Thursday 16th of April 2009 01:00:23 AM

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Our lungs were burning by the time we stopped running. We had reached the outskirts of town and the sky, already bleak from the falling rain and residual smoke and elements, was starting to darken. Twilight was approaching. Weak from adrenalin and hunger we came across an old farm and sought refuge within. The barn was rickety and dark but it looked to have been cleared of animals for quite some time. The homestead laid a good hundred or so metres away behind a barbed wire fence, the occupants we assumed dead inside – if not hungry. It wasn’t the ideal location but it was all we had. Using whatever we could find we barricaded ourselves inside and waited as night quickly fell.

 

The rain continued to patter down, coming and going, the sound hypnotic as we sat up on the musty boards that smelled of old oil and cow dung and exchanged solemn glances. Time passed slowly – it always did now.

 

“Rob, you’re freezing,” I gasped.

 

He smiled at me, introverted as always, as he sat shivering against a solid balustrade. He shook his head and pretended to dismiss it but even across the few feet that separated us I could see his teeth and jaw chattering. Crawling towards him I stripped off my jacket and ignoring his protest slipped it around him. His smile grew but all too soon wavered and fell away.

 


“I’m okay,” he sniffled. Water still dripped in places from his hair. Despite his initial protest he huddled behind the jacket and breathed into his hands, wringing them to warm them.

 

“Come here,” I said, settling in along side him. I leant against his side, cringing at first from the water still saturating his clothes. Together we huddled beneath the one jacket as David could be heard lazily patrolling the ground below. For a while we didn’t talk, we just sat together listening to the rain and pretending not to strain our eyes and ears to the slightest movement.

 

“Better?” I asked eventually.

 

Rob slid his arms around me as I cuddled against him, blushing beneath his gaze that I could no longer see only feel.

 

He nodded but I knew without him having to say a word that he was lying.

 

“God I’m so cold.”

 

“You’ve probably got a chill,” I assured.

 

I looked around but it was virtually impossible to see in the near pitch black darkness. Though I had a torch amongst other things in my backpack I knew the bright light would only attract them. There was nothing to dry him off with as he had lost his equipment earlier – now we were down to bare minimum of everything, including the one sleeping bag. Carefully I dragged the bag over and unzipped it, unfurling the blanket as Rob sat shivering behind me. He protested but I knew he didn’t mean it. Since the gas attack all those months ago there was no such thing as chivalry anymore, just the basic need to survive. To an utterance of thanks I wrapped him in it. Eventually we lay cuddled together as I did my best to warm him using my body heat for insulation. For what felt like hours we lay frozen together, him cuddling into my back, struggling to get warm in the damp and the darkness. The chattering of his teeth steadily worsened.

 

“Rae?” he stammered at some point.

 

I fluttered my eyes open and grunted back in acknowledgement.

 

“I’m- I’m sorry,” he began.

 

Rather than let him continue I soothed him and assured that everything was okay. We’d find food later; we’d get him another backpack. But even as I spoke hunger and exhaustion was claiming me and I soon fell asleep.

 

When I awoke the blue-grey hue of the encroaching dawn peered in through gaps in the barn walls. The rain had finally stopped, and so too had Rob’s feverish shivers. It took me an instant to realise in the ear-ringing silence that something was wrong. Rob’s arm was too heavy. It was too cold. On instinct I recoiled. Immediately I heard a distinct sound, like a low growl, and the hair on the back of my neck stood on end. A cold shiver ran the length of my spine. I was frozen beneath the blanket. There was movement behind me. The blanket was lifting. I closed my eyes. I squeezed them tight. I could smell the tepid rotting breath. I could hear the floorboards creaking beneath him. He was pushing himself up onto an arm behind me. He was leaning over me. He was drawing closer. Opening my eyes I peered back in time to see him lunge mouth open towards me. The sound was inhuman. I screamed-

 

***

 

“Shh!”

 

With a gasp I furiously fluttered my eyes open. Someone had their palm wrapped around my mouth, smothering me. I struggled and was smartly stopped. David shook me. He raised a finger to his lips. That’s when I heard it too – movement outside. It sounded like footsteps pounding through the dirt – not the usual limp dragging gait of the dead, but something other. My shoulders deflated. Releasing my face David gingerly lifted his rifle from the floor and gestured his intention. He was going to take up ambush position inside the door. Struggling to shirk off my dreams I nodded, immediately startled into action. Stiffly uncurling myself from the floorboards I had called my bed for the night; I picked up my pistol and checked the magazine clip. Almost empty. Figured. Outside the boarded window shadows were moving; People, and more agile than what we were used to. Hope soared and then faded at the prospect we had now wandered into the path of a far more dangerous enemy – other survivors just like us; desperate, lonely, paranoid and destitute – and looking to survive by any and all means necessary.

 

Peering through the boards nailed over the window David frowned and drew closer. A perpetual dim light painted a blue-grey line across his face. In the internal gloom it was hard to tell whether night was falling or the sun was rising, or even was season it was anymore.

 

“What?” I asked.

 

David raised his hand at me gesturing silence. A moment later he beckoned me over. Taking my pistol with me I made my way across the dusty old hut to join him.

“Look at that,” he said, “Tell me what you see.”

 

Thinking it was a trick question I frowned but did as I was bidden. Through the small sliver I was able to see the road we had walked hours before strewn with the usual detritus of a town gone to hell virtually overnight. I saw the burnt out overturned cars, the ransacked houses with their darkened windows and gaping doors like mouths opened in a silent scream, the same suburban façades I’d seen for weeks now wandering the countryside in almost every town we passed through. Always we saw the same trail of destruction but came across very few survivors; some, like us, obviously didn’t want to be found.

 

Seeing movement several metres to my left my heart locked inside my throat but with a morbid curiosity I could not make myself turn away as footsteps, slow even footsteps came, passed and continued on their way past.

 

“There’s people out there,” David exclaimed in awe. “I don’t think they’re infected.”

 

“Who are they?”

 

“What does it matter? They’re alive aren’t they?”

 

“Yeah but for how much longer?”

 

David frowned at me and my previous venom dried up, stalling like a knot at the back of my throat. My eyes fell to the floor as I stood there silent a moment, lost to my thoughts. When I looked up David was making his way back towards the door.

 

“What are you doing?”

 

“There’s a light out there,” he marvelled.

 

I shrugged in confusion. The look on his face both scared and excited me. I saw him reach for the door handle. My heart was pounding with such force I felt like I was about to collapse where I stood. I didn’t have time to stop him; clearly he had already decided on the best course of action. Left with no choice but to go along or be left behind I hurriedly gathered my meagre possessions into my bag and shrugged it on to my back. Still clasping my gun in my fist I met him in the doorway.

 

“We’ll wait til they’re out of sight and then we’ll follow,” he said. To my tentative expression he added, “Would you rather stay here and wait for more of those things come and find us?”

 

I shook my head. In truth I was too scared to say anything. In truth I had no idea what was about to happen to us. I stood there as memories of Rob hit me like a tidal wave. All I knew was I didn’t want that to happen to me. I didn’t to become whatever he now was.

 

***



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~ 'Shane' is my virtual world ~


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The Park: Apocalypse (Story)
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***

 

Mud squelched beneath our shoes as we walked. It felt like my feet were made of cold wet cement. We had been walking along the riverbank for hours in virtual silence following a road that led god-knew-where. Drawing to a stop David nudged the body of a dead fish with the toe of his boot and frowned. Its eye stared up at us in the same blank gaze of the living dead. With a snort he kicked it aside into the water and continued walking. I stood watching the water ripple around it as the corpse floated away. I licked my lips that were dry and cracked from thirst. Tears came and went in my eyes as I stood there looking around.


“What?” David muttered as he paused atop a rocky mound.


I shrugged. Words failed me. I stood there looking at the trees across the riverbank nodding in the breeze; at the grass shimmering in overgrown fields, at the water gently lapping towards us, and helplessness took a hold. Birds sung unseen in the distance. The chorus of insects continued on so loud that my ears were ringing.


“This is it isn’t it?” I muttered aloud to no one. My shoulders sunk. “It’s over. We’ve lost. Nature’s won.”

 

I dug the heel of my shoe against the rocks and stared at it soullessly. The white lines that had marked the boundary of the road around us were almost completely obscured by mud or grass or water – eventually all traces of it would be gone. I dug my teeth into my lip as I thought about all the wonders of the world I would never see now slowly being destroyed and reclaimed by the elements. Even after all these months none of it felt really real. David sighed heavily ahead of me. Rather than speak he shifted his backpack on his shoulders. He bowed his head.


“Come on,” he said and resumed walking.

 

We had lost sight of the others long ago but continued onward following the road as it hugged the water’s edge. On one side mountains rose up and obscured the natural light. Using the angle of shadows bleeding out in the distance we continued walking until we emerged in a clearing. Ahead we saw what resembled rooftops shimmering amidst the heat haze. With a decisive huff David slipped the rifle from his shoulder and snapped open the chamber. Two cartridges left. He snapped it back to a close and c ocked it. I looked up at him with my heart pounding in the back of my throat.


“What are we gonna do?” I asked. I turned my attentions back down to the town a couple of hundred metres ahead of us and scoured it with fear and trepidation. “What if it’s another gang down there? If they see us they might think we’re infected and kill us.”


“Worse,” David uttered. He slapped the pockets of his camouflage pants with his free hand and then stopped. “They might think we’re not,” he said, “and still shoot us.”

 

He smirked and raised the rifle to his shoulder to peer through the scope. With a pout I looked at the ground feeling my tears returning. Rob’s hand was wrapped around mine in my imagination. I smiled but it limply fell away. David made a sound that immediately stole my attentions.


“What?”


“There’s people down there alright. A few of them. And they’re locked in and armed.” He raised the barrel holding the rifle’s butt against his beefy shoulder. “They could be having a party in there and I don’t know if we’re invited.”

“Well where did the others go?” I wondered aloud. “The ones from the last town. Surely they had to go somewhere. We’ve been walking for hours and we haven’t seen one of them. What if they’re down there right now?”

 

David shrugged. He snatched the rifle down and peered through the scope again. He studied the buildings and the exposed terrain that surrounded it with a grave frown. The grumble of what sounded like a car engine had us both balk backwards, startled. It had been a long time since I’d heard a car moving let alone seen one. Those things that chased us may have been dead but they still seemed to react to noise and movement like the rest of us, making travel by car sometimes unfeasible. If we were trying to stay hidden the last thing we needed was to draw undue attention to ourselves, clearly that didn’t seem to be an issue down there. My heart suddenly inflated with renewed hope. After so many months it was the first real glimpse we’d had of life; proper, established normal life – as normal as things would be anymore. But as the smile on my face grew the look on David’s face darkened. He wasn’t particularly handsome or well-structured with his clean-shaven head and blunt heavily stubbled face, in fact he looked more like the type of person people tried to avoid before the war broke out, but he had proven himself to be dependable and smart and strong, and he was all I had left now since Rob’s ‘passing.’ I tried to encourage him but David in his inherent seriousness turned away.

 

The town below was small, badly worn by the salt water and wind, and several buildings looked to have been gutted by fire. Barbed wire and makeshift barricades surrounded what we could see, obvious remnants of what the armed forces in their panic to contain the outbreak had left behind. One or two army vehicles were left but none were operational. One lay on its side too a black smouldering shell, the other with its doors still open sat eerily still. David was staring up at the sky that was its usual state of grey. I didn’t know what time it was but since war broke out time as we had once known and so heavily relied upon had lost its meaning. Clocks were useless as too was money or status. We were all the same now, like animals depending and adapting to our environment in a way that befit our primal ancestors. He sighed and ran a hand over his round scalp.


“What are we gonna do?” I asked again. I grimaced. I hated how fragile I suddenly sounded but in truth I was looking for assurance more than answers.




-- Edited by Ravynlee on Sunday 19th of April 2009 10:07:47 AM

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Resident of OUR TOWN
Resident & Admin of DLoD
~ 'Shane' is my virtual world ~


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~ ModMother / The Cougar ~

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David huffed and shrugged his shoulders at me. The road behind was empty and growing dark beneath the shade of the mountain and trees. The road ahead was light but fraught with unseen dangers. If this was the place shining the light into the sky intermittently it had to be for a reason. I didn’t want to think these people, whoever they were, had lost touch of their humanity to such a degree they would lure survivors just to rob them, but there was no guarantees anymore. The war had killed the life I’d known but not all of it had stayed dead. With a shudder I bowed my head and sighed decisively. Hearing gravel crunch like bones underfoot I looked up. David was waiting for me.

 

“We keep moving. Same as always. If we stop we die,” he said, “I don’t know about you but I don’t feel like dying today. If they want to shoot us so be it, I’d rather that than the alternative. But I’m not going down without a fight. Are you coming or not?”

 

Taking my trusty pistol in fist I nodded and together we made our way down the road towards the village.

***

 

The camp was silent as we approached. We knew we were being watched, we could feel it, but we didn’t see anyone. The barbed wire glittered in the sun and shifted lazily in the cool salty breeze. Making our way towards the gate we studied the white sheets that billowed from make shift flag poles on both sides. We exchanged wary glances. The sign above the gate said ‘The Park.’ We didn’t see any evidence of the infected anywhere around us; we couldn’t even see their rotting corpses liquefying in the sun as we had in other ‘safehouses.’ Panic swelled in me at the thought we were already too late. Visions of the dead limping around inside probably massed in their hundreds hiding in darkness flooded my head but we were at the gate and there was no turning back. With a dry mouth I came to a stop beside David. Then, from out of nowhere, a woman’s voice called down to us.


“Drop 'em and raise your hands!”


David glared at me with a strange smile on his face. I shook my head. If he wanted to die in a shoot out I was begging him with my eyes not to take me down with him. But the woman called again and we saw, through the fence line, the shadow of a head peering back at us. With a distinct sound we knew she was armed and dangerous. I immediately threw my pistol on the ground as with a huff David reluctantly followed. The gate creaked open and the woman emerged.

“Have you been bitten?”


David and I stared at her, at the petite brunette with two pistols aimed in our faces, and raised our hands in unison.


“Have you been bitten?” she yelled again.

 

Another emerged behind her and snatched up our guns. Someone else relieved us of our backpacks. David’s face was crumpled bitterly. I shook my head. Before I could say anything a third man emerged, young, not overly striking, with long dark hair and a slightly toned build. Large dark sunglasses shielded his eyes from us as he swaggered out of the gates headed in our direction.


“Sorry,” he said, “I know what it looks like but believe me it’s not. This is a sanctuary for survivors just like you. We just have to take… certain precautions, you understand.”


“So you’re not robbing us?” David uttered, his eyes narrowed on the younger man. He snorted and spat at the mud. “You could have fooled me.”


The young man smiled. He was nervous but happy too. I couldn’t tell how long he’d been living in this camp as he was practically incognito behind his clothes and glasses but it was obvious he was elated to see new company arrive – even if he was looking at David like some untamed animal that he wasn’t sure how to deal with.


“Please,” the young man said, “I don’t want to get off to a bad start. My name’s Jason. This here is Jill, Leon and Albert. We call him Wesker.”


I nodded. David said nothing.


“Rae. That’s David.”


“So that’s it, just the two of you?”


“There was more,” I began, but then my mouth stayed open and remained silent. David was lowering his hands and sharing a defiant glare with the woman named Jill a few feet away. Jason nodded. He smiled tightly.


“So how’d you find us?”


“Followed the white rabbit,” David said. He rolled his gaze upwards.


When his eyes returned he was smirking bitterly. Clearly he was not at all happy to have been separated from his beloved rifle. Jason smiled. Another of the men chuckled. Silence beset us. Ships still docked in the harbour rattled against the water. The tide was turning. Again Jason looked up and studied the sky. His shoulders fell with a sigh. With a nod the others were returning inside. Jason gestured us to follow him.


“It’s not much but it’s the best we could do with what we’ve got,” he said. “There’s a few huts inside with the basics, you’re welcome to one of course. Boiled water, some basic food, it’s not much but it’s enough. For now. We’ve even got a generator for a few things so it’s not all rustic,” he smiled. “We’re expecting others, at least we can always hope. When we get more numbers we'll go scout, that’s the plan anyway. Well, I’ll let you take a look around. Settle in. Any questions come find me; I’ll answer what I can. Anyway… welcome to your new home, welcome to ‘The Park.’”


With a creak the gates closed, locking us inside.





-- Edited by Ravynlee on Sunday 19th of April 2009 10:23:49 AM

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"...It seems what's left of my human side is slowly changing...in me...
(Will you give it to me?) Looking at my own reflection - when suddenly it changes - violently it changes."

By now I should be going insane.

"Get up - come on, get down with the sickness. Open up your hate and let it flow into me."

No human contact for three months. Most people would be happily skipping down their imaginary yellow brick roads, arm-in-arm with invisible Tin Men and Cowardly Lions, well on their way to the magical city of Straightjacket-and-Rubber-Room.

"Madness is the gift that has been given to me."

I'm fine.

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

I've always been partial to night, so the constant darkness doesn't bother me. Actually, I find it comforting - my night vision is a bit better than most people's, so it gives me an advantage. Over people.

Zombies not so much.

But, hey, who cares about zombies. You kill them and they're gone. It's easy. Whack, off with their heads, and you haven't got to worry about guilt or lawsuits or anything. Whack. Whack. Whack. Not bang, though I've swipped a few guns off my kills. I didn't like them. I always end up using my katana - guns are too noisy, too prone to failure at inopportune moments.

Katanas, though...there's a weapon with elegance and deadliness. Beauty and power. The martial art I took when I was younger focused on tantos and katanas, and though I haven't found a single tanto, every abandoned pawn shop I've come across has had a katana. Some cheap ones, some high-quality. And this one...the one I have now is the finest blade I've ever laid my eye on.

Trinity.

A sword so fine it deserves a name.

Names...I don't remember a lot of them anymore. Don't need to. I'm a pirate, a vagabond, a murderer - I rove around scrounging through old stores and whatnot, and when that fails, I track down another human or group of humans. Usually I have to kill all of a group before I can take their supplies, but every now and then it only takes one or two. You have to pick out the leader, that's all. Whack.

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

...

... ...

... ... ...

I've been travelling in the same direction for weeks, following a river. Haven't seen many buildings, much less food outlets. Haven't come across any people, either. Zombies, titan zombies, hellmutts, sure - but no humans. You can usually find them hiding here and there in small places, places they think no one will look. But even those have been barren.

I'm starving and dehydrated. Rotting, almost-definitely-infected flesh is starting to look appetizing. The polluted water that practically kills just with its smell makes my mouth hurt from trying to water. I stumble and pass out, and at any moment a zombie could shuffle up and take a chunk out of my arm, and I'd never know it. Even if I did, I can't fight in this state anymore. I can't believe I'm even thinking this but...

I need help.

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

...Walls...? ...A building. People. ...Please let there be people...they don't even have to be compassionate...they can just kill me and put me out of my misery...

Just...get...close enough...


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I know I should be in bed and I know there's meant to be an update from DL regarding the state of the Park but I couldn't help myself again - I wrote another 3 'filler' pages while waiting for the update - and I haven't integrated Jess in yet. I'm working on that depending as to what happens first, DL's update or Jess' response - or me getting impatient again.

 

For reference 'Nick' below is a character anyone can control. If you need someone to talk to and have no one to tell it to he's available. Do with him as you see fit (though I suggest killing straight away to be useless to us all unless you can validate it so early in the story, just a thought is all wink.gif)

 

***

 

An eerie feeling overcame me setting foot inside what was to be my new refuge. As natural light fast faded and the sky outside cast its usual dissociative grey glare through whatever vantage points it could, I crept in with awe and trepidation thinking; this was someone else’s home not that long ago. Someone else lived here and now they’re all gone. They’re dead – at least I hope they’re dead – really dead. How long will it be before whatever happened to them happens to me? But I consciously stopped there before my imagination got the best of me. I couldn’t afford to think thoughts like that anymore – but still they niggled at the back of my mind like a nagging conscience.

 

Creeping in with carefully placed steps I studied the darkness as David patrolled as always just in front of me. Though he was technically unarmed he penetrated the shadows with his fists raised as if anticipating something to suddenly manifest and launch a surprise attack. I smiled at him guiltily as he lowered his arms with a sigh and looked back at me, his face still crumpled in that stubborn and unimpressed façade. The woman Jill who had walked us to the hut watched on until David met her stare. With a snort she tapped the doorway with her hand, nodded at me, and then walked away.


I sighed rather than say anything. An awkward silence had set in. I watched David lazily wander around the room, picking up this, shifting that, all the while maintaining the same tight-lipped silence he had picked up the minute we had been accosted and relieved of our supplies at the gate.


“Well , this is… nice,” I struggled eventually.


David snorted and shook his head, a dour smirk tugging up the corner of his mouth. I cast my eyes around the hut, at the kitchen benches still cluttered with dusty dishes, of condiments scattered across the dining table, at the window that had been boarded up and the tattered curtains hanging limp to one side of them and my shoulders slumped.

 

“It could be worse.”


“You’re kidding, right?”

 

David slid his slitted eyes over his shoulder towards me. Again he scoffed and picked up a fallen chair to set in place under the table. The noise of scraping legs against the wooden floor was amplified and aggressive in the stillness and silence.

 

“Open your eyes. This is a damn prison, Rae. The only thing that’s missing are the bars.”

 

I smiled and shook my head. Sure it wasn’t the Hilton but after months of living on the lamb, sleeping on hardwood floors and walking endlessly in the driving wind and rains I was happy at last to have a place where I could stay for longer than a night.

 

“I don’t think so,” I said eventually. I was hoping to sound certain even if I was only convincing myself.

 

David turned and frowned at me. His arms were locked across his chest. His head pitched on a lean.

 

“No?” he challenged. A beefy arm shot out and stabbed at a wall covered with dusty photographs. “You tell that to the guards. They took our guns away and they kept theirs, did you happen to notice that? There’s miles of barbed wire around us, one way in or out, and we’re already being told where to go. Mark my words, the next thing they’ll do is exert authority and start telling us what to do and where. I don’t like this Rae, I don’t like it one bit. We should have shot that bitch when we had the chance and maybe taken a chance at the rest. This isn’t a safe house it’s a f***ing prison compound and I’ve got no intentions of sticking around. I’ve seen what happens in places like this, all it takes is one bight with all of us locked in here and we’re history. You want to be a sitting duck in a little pond? I sure as sh*t don’t. These are amateurs, Rae, they’re kids. They’re not going to protect us; we can take care of ourselves just like we always have. The first chance I get I am grabbing my sh*t, grabbing some supplies, and getting the f**k out of here. I suggest if you’ve got any brains you’ll do the smart thing and follow me. It’s that or stay here with your new friends and count the days til one of you get jumped or raped and decide to make a meal out of the rest of you.”

 

David snorted and shook his head before striding past without so much as another word.

 

“Hey- whoa!” I heard another voice say.

 

Footsteps rescinded without lapse or pause.

 

Making my way to the door I saw a man waiting, staring at David’s back with his face scowling in shock and indignation.

 

“Man, what’s his problem? I was just…”

 

I smiled tightly and nodded at the stranger who was smoothing down the front of his jacket as if David had run into him – he probably had and in typical fashion had kept walking. The young man was easily half his build even if he was taller, and offered no real physical deterrent.

 

“Sorry about that,” I said.

 

I watched David’s skulking frame trudge past a large building and disappear around a corner. The young man was looking at me expectantly, a big grin beaming from ear to ear. Words failed me. I was so taken by his openness that for a moment I was unsure quite how to deal with it.

 

“Hey. I’m Nick,” he said, thrusting his hand out for me to shake.

 

I frowned as I stared at his hand and with a small smile accepted it.

 

“Rae.”

 

“Rae,” he repeated, still shaking my hand. Though the gesture seemed awkwardly long I wasn’t offended by it. Clearly there was a desperation for human contact in him too, I thought, and couldn’t help but stare into his eyes that were blue and big and a bit misty for no real reason. I wondered what horrors he too had seen and endured in the many months since the war had impacted – and what horrors he must have perpetrated in order to survive. Eventually I slipped my hand free as Nick excused himself with an apology. He dug his hands into his hip pockets and shrugged his shoulders beneath his faded bomber jacket.

 

“I’m just glad to see new faces is all,” he blushed at me. “After all this time we were starting to lose hope. Well, I was losing hope anyway. Crazy I know.”



-- Edited by Ravynlee on Sunday 19th of April 2009 11:49:26 PM

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“How long have you been here?”

 

“Not long,” Nick shrugged. “Feels longer. They,” he pointed to the two armed men patrolling the gate with their weapons relaxed against their shoulders, “picked me up. Not far out of here there’s a small town. I made it that far before a group of zombies found me. I was almost history too. Jason took me in, me and a few others. There’s not many of us left. One of them turned,” he said, his face falling sadly. “We had to shoot her before she took anyone else. Buried the dead in a mass grave about a quarter mile just north of here.”

 

I nodded in acknowledgement but felt unable to say anything. Hearing the footsteps of Leon and Wesker pass by; I bowed my eyes and leant against the doorway feeling the cold hard wood digging into my shoulder. Dried blood stained the flaking paint beside me. Pushing myself upright I stepped outside of the hut and drew the door to a close. I almost laughed then. I hadn’t been here two minutes and already I was feeling territorial. A warm sensation flooded my chest as I thought about that, reassured by the fact I had something at least to call mine again – but all too soon reality hit like a ton of bricks. I glimpsed around at the carnage and destruction that still lay around me. It still looked like a war zone. I drew my coat closer around my neck.

 

“Hey, you’re not from around here are you?”

 

“No,” I shook my head. “Australia.”

 

“Christ, what the hell are you doing here in the middle of nowhere? Hell of a time to be taking a vacation isn’t it?” Nick chuckled, “Literally the end of the world. Who’d have thought huh? I thought we were supposed to be the generation that died from global warming and s**t. Shows how much they all knew.”

 

I smiled at him but my eyes lowered sadly. At first I could not answer him. Thoughts of my parents, my family, and my friends back home in another country were too painful now to recollect. I didn’t even know if they had survived the gas or even if they had been affected but there was no way of knowing for certain anymore. The local TV, before the stations went dead, had shown pictures of the gas clouds culminating across the planet, and through the panic some international broadcasts leaked through. With the collapse of telecommunications all I had left was hope and a gut feeling that tried to reassure me that in spite of all I had seen and heard since the gas attack and after that everything back there was okay – it had to be. Though I often had thoughts to skip a boat and set sail for home part of me deep inside knew it was hopeless. Better to die fighting on land than die starving and alone at sea, I told myself, but still that thought never seemed quite consolation enough.

 

Nick offered to show me around and with a nod I accepted, distracted by my thoughts and seeking refuge from them. I couldn’t relax with fear setting into my bones at the thought that David was in the process of living up to his threats and was somehow even now making his way out of the compound and into danger without me. We had made it this far that I felt abandoned without him, still I fought to shrug it off. I stepped in along side Nick with my shoulders hunched unable to shirk the age-old fears of the past of stranger-danger and simultaneously glad just to have the opportunity to talk with someone, anyone for that matter, without the fear of giving our position away. Together Nick and I wandered the compound and between the buildings under the ever-watchful eyes of our armed guardians and protectors – it was, however modest, the first glimmer of hope I had had in what felt like a lifetime.

 

***

“You have a garden?” I exclaimed as we drew to a stop.

Behind a rusty gate in a small crop of land a tangle of wild plants grew, some looking like they had been there for eons. It was obviously a community garden and was ripe with an assortment of fruit and vegetables and accompanying flowers, bringing the bees in to pollinate what man could not do with all the wonders of his modern science and medicine – all the good they had done us in the long run, I snorted. Pushing my way inside I bowed beneath the plastic cover, smiling at the simplicity of the set up and awed that the gas had miraculously not affected it. Plastic tubing channelled the rain into buckets and these sat just inside the fence line, waiting for the next volunteer to empty them into the untamed jungle.

“Wow, someone needs to fire the greenkeeper,” I smirked as I wove my way through. There wasn’t much that was ripe but there looked to be enough in the process of turning, ensuring of nothing else we didn’t completely starve to death while waiting – but since the war the seasons were unpredictable now and ever changing. God only knew how much longer we would be able to keep it this way if they too turned against us.

At the back climbing along the corrugated tin of a nearby shed wall I spotted a jasmine plant tangled amidst the vines. I grinned and snatched up a flower and held it to my nostrils.

“Jasmine, his favourite,” I found myself sniffling.

“Who’s favourite?” Nick wondered. He leant with his forearms draped over the opened gate looking like a man without any real cares in the world.

I shook my head and smiled back at him, too choked for a minute to say anything. In my head I could see them, see the wild bushes amidst the palm trees, I could hear the roar of the ocean and feel the sun baking my head and shoulders and smell the salt and the sea as had been described to me. I was startled by the sensation of tears sliding down my face and quickly smeared them away.

“No one,” I lied, twirling the sprig of pale pink flowers between my fingers. The memory of his kiss, of his warm lips on mine was so strong I closed my eyes, feeling giddy and lightheaded. The roar of his dead gaping mouth startled them open again as I gasped for breath and pretended with a nervous smile that I was okay.

“Just a friend,” I said, smearing my eyes again. 

Nick frowned at me clearly unconvinced. With my head still bowed I held the flowers to my nose and made my way out of the garden, struggling to keep the memories down that refused like everything else to stay completely dead.


***
*BTW tried 3 times to edit the last half of this and the douchebag editor won't let me put spaces between the sentences no matter how many spaces I insert. Will try and edit to space it out and make it more readable again tomorrow.
EDIT#2 - Thanks Sarah - the Shift+Enter trick actually worked. I owe you! =)


-- Edited by Ravynlee on Monday 20th of April 2009 12:02:01 AM

-- Edited by Ravynlee on Monday 20th of April 2009 07:07:05 PM

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"You stick that needle in me and I swear I'll fuc-"

"Shh," the mysterious figure whispered as he shoved tape against my face, covering my mouth.  "It'll be all right.  You'll thank me once this is over."

I couldn't move - I was strapped firmly to a large stone slab.  I pushed upwards with my arms in hopeless attempts to free myself.  The veins in my arms were thick and the stirring blood inside changed my skin from a pale white to a deep red.

The person -- who apparently was a man according to his deep voice -- stuck the needle directly into my wrist as I watched the viscous liquid inside the syringe slowly enter my pulsing vein.

I tried to scream.  My eyelids opened wider and wider.

"Hey," Alice shook me gently, awaking me from my nightmare, "Having those dreams again?"

I looked around, eyes slowly recovering from their rest, and noticed familiar surroundings.  I was in a forest - the one closest to home.  Trees towered around me, covering the hideous black sky.  I looked at Alice as her delicate hand stayed securely on my shoulder and tried to smile.  I couldn't.  To my sadness, I just couldn't.

"Aye... aye.  I... I can remember more this time.  It was a man who stuck the needle in me.  I seen the stuff inside it - it was thick."

She bit her lip in a vain attempt to seem sympathetic.  "Blood... thick?"

I smirked and shrugged her question off but the probability of the liquid being blood was frightening.  What if I had been infected? 

I stood up.  I looked around and could see nothing but endless trees.  The sun was setting - the sky was becoming darker.  That was the interesting thing, I had always thought: despite the horrible gases polluting the air and sky, the sun still managed to shine through.  It was as solid as a symbol of hope. 

Some symbol. 

"Don't you think it's strange that we haven't seen any undead in a while?" Alice asked me as she walked over to a rotting log and sat on it.  "I mean, we used to have to fight them all the time.  Now... hell, now we're lucky to find a small group of them."

I was confused - she almost seemed disappointed.  "Damn straight we're lucky.  We're lucky that we haven't bumped into one of them - that's a bad thing.  We're lucky to be alive Alice."

She nodded as if reassuring herself that we didn't want to find them.  I glanced at the ground and saw my axe nestled in some grass, crumpled and flattened by the weight of it.  I had gotten it from a school a couple of states back; one of those fire axes.  It had never let me down.  I picked it up and made my way over to Alice.

Voom!  Alice fell to the ground and a small red circle became visible on her forehead.  Blood slowly trickled from the dot and I suddenly realised she had been shot.

Frustration filled me rather than fear and I let out a roar.

"Raaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaarrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrgggggghhhh!"

I turned about, seen no one.  I looked to my left; to my right - but I could see no one.  I turned to Alice and ran to her lifeless body.  I tilted up her head as I knelt down beside her and kissed her nose - some sh*tty, stupid way of paying my respects.  Laying her head down gently, a tear slipped from my eye and onto her lips.  I wiped my nose and whispered, "This is one nightmare you won't be waking from my love."

"You gonna stand there like some faggot cryin' over a dumb broad?"  A voice hit me from behind and every word pierced my ear as if it were being stabbed with a spear.  They were close; whoever they were.  It was a man.

"You... fu**ing bastard... you're gonna pay... I'll kill you!"  I turned around and swung my axe wildly, careless of whoever may be behind me.  My eyes were shut for a long time and I can only remember hearing an unimpressed laugh before I was knocked unconscious.

"Shh.  It'll be all right.  You'll thank me once this is over."

I was dreaming again.



-- Edited by Brendan on Monday 20th of April 2009 05:08:35 AM

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Sunday: FOOD IS LOW - BIG DINNER WEDNESDAY NIGHT - HUNTING FOR SUPPLIES THURSDAY



I woke up to a cold sweat...dreams of a better time scared me...feelings that will never leave. I need to know if my family is alive...even my girlfriend..anyone...I cna't handle this anymore. I stepped out of my bedroom and into the dark damp room, Jill standing by. "It's a bit early for you. Are you fine?" Her cheerfulness out of no where startled me.

"I am fine, just a...nightmare." She wanted to continue the conversation, I could see it in her eyes, and if she did she was already tuned out, I walked to the small fridge and looked in. Nothing? ****... We are running low on food supplies, maybe the rec center has some more supplies. I threw on the basic attire. A dark T-shirt with a faded out band logo, a light green jacket with a bunch of pockets, now mostly carrying shells for my favorite rifle. Pulled up some dirty dark blue jeans and stepped out.

"Jason, I am going to go watch the main door...with that last group of survivors, more are bound to come? Right?" I nodded, I have no idea, ****...they might have brought another wave of those infected mother****ers. We lost someone last time...but we have a better defense now maybe just good enough to keep out the damn "biggies" unlike last time. I noticed Nick was speaking to the new people. He has always been in our business, distracting Wesker, and bothering Leon. He seems to avoid Jill... Thank god there are new people to bother! I chuckled.

I stepped into the rec room, pool table in the middle with some damaged cards, and saw the kitchen in the back. I opened the fridge, four bottles of fresh water, one steak ready to expire and some bread on the top of the fridge...I checked the garden last night...not much ripe...

I stepped back out and saw Jill looking out over the coastline, she waved me over. I climbed the steps up and looked outwards... a group of about five, maybe seven zombies were on their way. Wesker now approched.

"We have to kill them before they arrive, they may alert more." Wesker looked down to me, tall son of a bitch. I nodded and looked to Jill, who seems worried. As Wesker readied the rifle and Jill watched, a sudden new sight caught our eye.

Two men drove across the wasteland and the group of zombies hit the ground...

+++

Will finish tomorrow

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PETERDEA #1: A Basic History
Recommended for listening while reading: “Get Smashed Gate Crash” by Hadouken!

“Okay then I’m going to kick the **** out of you...” I told the kid who tried to get me to leave. He reacted by turning to his friends and laughing, which really set me off. I stepped forwards and landed the biggest haymaker you have ever seen right on his jaw. The loser dropped, not before all of his friends came over to get me.
Heath taught me not to talk when a fight is about to erupt but I really couldn’t help myself. All three of this kids friends came to get me.
“Right, no surprise here homos...” I laughed as I landed another haymaker on another friend. “You guys obviously haven’t been taught how to fight.”
I knew haymakers were a bad idea but I figured that my only option with these three losers was to drop at least two as quickly as I could.
One of them got behind me and attempted to hold my arms back while the other tried to punch me in the face over and over. I managed to avoid the first few punches but the next few hit me directly i the face. It didn’t bother me that I was getting beaten down, and revenge would have been far from my mind if I knew what was about to happen.
I felt the grip of the loser behind me loosen followed by a scream of intense pain. As soon as I was free I punched the guy who was punching me out and then turned around to check out who the hell stuck up for me and had my back.
What I saw was so strange, almost made me sick. Some sick looking dude was making a feast of this loser. I didn’t think of what I was doing at the time, I ran over to this sick looking dude and kicked him directly in the stomach. He barely moved, which surprised me. I don’t mean to brag but even back then I had more power then anyone I knew.
I decided it was time for some more extreme action, I took a run up and kicked the freak right in his sick looking head. He fell off the loser who held me back earlier but then began to get up. This angered me. Alcohol fuelled me, I kicked it in the head over and over and over until it stopped moving. I had killed someone.
The loser who was attacked earlier got up and then he started to feast upon someone else. I thought about my chances of killing him, and decided against it. I’d rather go down for one murder on “self defence” rather than killing many people and just getting torn apart by the law. So I got up and left.

I was fairly drunk that night, but it was the first night of the end of the world. So really if I knew that, killing the losers would have been first on my list. The unfortunate thing was the loss of my family. But it didn’t take long to overcome the grief once the will to survive kicked in. My family were incredibly close to me but at least I had Kaye and Heath so see me through the loss.
I was a crazy party kid before the **** hit the fan. My crew back home were known for putting on a Hadouken! Or Dizzee Rascall album and just getting totally messed up. We’d always go out looking for parties, drugs, girls and booze. The whole thing changed once Heath got ahold of me.
“Your living like a total dickhead mate...” He told me straight out. Of course I didn’t react well to that. I launched at him and tried to kick his head in, but of course, he beat the **** out of me. The next day he came up to me and talked to me about it.
“You go around crashing parties, doing drugs and ****ing all the birds man, you’re gonna ruin your life if you aren’t careful. Come out with me and the boys for a drink, you needa learn a lot or your gonna end up dead.”
After that Heath taught me to fight, moderate and live. Even after everything went to **** Heath remained the strongest guy I know. Yeah by that point I stood a chance in a fight with him but he is powerful not only physically but also emotionally and mentally which is something I’ll admit took me a lot longer to learn.
After everything happened (I won’t refer to it as anything in particular, I still have no idea what the hell is going on) Heath introduced me to his friend Kaye who was a beautiful young girl. We then set off to find refuge from the horrors of the flesh eaters. We knew there was a long road ahead.

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Refer to my post at the end of page 2 in the other Park (discussion) thread for the info on what follows. As stated there ALL of this takes place between my last update and BEFORE DL's latest half-post. The reasons are explained there. This very long update is a weeks worth, covering all 'events' as stated in DL's post.

Again this is a LOT to read and if you read it good, if not it's up to you.
Who said this story is dead? Clearly not if I have anything to do with it wink.gif

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


I woke up sick. My brow and chin was damp from sweat. Pools gathered below my eyes. My stomach felt as if I’d been on the receiving end of a steel capped boot one too many times. With an unsteady hand I smeared sleep from my face. The knock on the door had startled us. With a scrape of wood against wood, chair legs landed softly on the floor. In the disassociating haze of darkness I met David’s eyes in fear. I couldn’t speak as the door creaked open. A silhouette emerged. I choked on in intake of breath. They were moving too slowly that my only thought was that they had found us – those things outside had found their way in – or had been let in on purpose. But before I could speak a voice interrupted.

“Head count,” he said.

My shoulders sunk as Leon emerged in the doorway. He cast his eyes over David still poised in his seat at the foot of the bed and snorted. Maybe it was the sharpened end of a broom handle he saw clutched in the big man’s fist that amused him – then again this was Leon. The man was drier than the Sahara desert, from what little I’d seen and heard of him I was under the impression the man didn’t possess a sense of humour let alone know what one was.

“What?” David croaked his voice peaked with disbelief. “You’ve got to be ****ting me. There’s maybe 10 people here all up and you’re doing roll call? What is this, detention?”

Leon sighed. Between peaks of his long dirty blonde fringe that always framed his brooding face, his eyes appeared to roll like a disparaging teacher.

“9, actually,” he responded in his usual unenthusiastic way. “One of the others, the last of the locals, passed away in her sleep last night. Looks like dysentery. There’s nothing we could do. Grub’s up in the rec room. You better get your share before someone else does.”

“Pass,” David uttered, relaxing back as he had been in his chair.

Though the bed was big enough for two he had assigned himself a seated position, without saying as much keeping himself in a state of readiness should anything happen, at the cost of comfort, company, and a decent night’s rest. But Leon shook his head in response.

“This isn’t a hotel. You’re a part of this group now; you’re expected to be there. We share what we have, that’s how it is here at The Park, that’s how it has to be if we want to survive.”

“Yeah, share everything but arms,” David muttered under his breath.

Leon pretended not to have heard him. “We can’t afford a break out of disease. You eat or you’ll starve. Don’t be a hard ass; if you don’t cooperate you’re not the only one that will suffer. You’ve got 15 minutes,” he said, then with a nod he turned his back and left the room.

Still shaken from the surprise wake up call as much as anticipation now, I turned to David to say something but the look on his face robbed me of the opportunity.

“What did I tell you?” he murmured bitterly as he slumped down in his chair. “Here we go… they say jump…”


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Time moved differently in The Park. Outside we had kept on the move and days and nights had blurred when we weren’t holed up, only now we were killing time instead of chasing it.

I had spent the first true day sleeping intermittently. It was hard to relax in a different environment but exhaustion and elation gleaned the best of me and I was left with little choice. David had amused himself getting to know the lay out of the camp, getting to recognise the faces that surrounded us, but never actually introduced himself to anyone. When boredom inexplicably set in he turned his focus back inside and started rummaging around the hut trying to find things, trying to absorb what he could for reasons he never really explained to me. The war and the horrors each of us who had survived had endured had to have left their indelible marks upon our embattled psyche – I was content enough for the fact he remained despite his initial reluctance, he was, despite his gruff and brooding exterior, something of a security blanket and a comfort to have around especially in this strange new place.

On the second day and into the third I cleaned. I hadn’t been altogether houseproud in my former life but idle hands, and the lingering taste of dust and mould in the air, soon got to me. I wasn’t out to win any awards, I was trying to keep myself busy, but soon enough without proper food or sustenance fatigue took over again and I got to a point where I could no longer work through it.

“You keep that up,” David had muttered as he whittled away at his new tool of choice with a paring knife, “and you’ll be dead by the end of the week. You have to learn to conserve your energy. Save it for the ones that need it,” he said. 

Though I didn’t ask there was something unnerving at the prospect he was no longer solely referring to the creatures that still, somewhere, roamed around outside. Not 24 hours later here I was sick and dehydrated, but I didn’t complain about my state, not once. After what we’d just heard I had a lot to be thankful for. Besides, in a post apocalyptic world no one cared for anything less than a fatal bite or wound anymore – anything else was just plain trivial and sympathy, such as it was amidst the bloodbath, was a wasted sentiment.


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-- Edited by Ravynlee on Sunday 26th of April 2009 10:39:40 PM

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The woman that had passed away we didn’t know. She had apparently been ill when we arrived and some people like us had been living on the run so long they had almost forgotten what it was like to associate with others – for some, especially those who had endured the worst horrors, or had fallen prey to other survivors who were in it for their own gain, there was probably no going back. I didn’t know her name, no one really did, but she had been young, much younger, and far leaner, than me. As I sat in public, as much as one could here, there was no gloating to be had that all the size zero women who had been the poster children for fashion and the envy of a pre-apocalyptic society, those that survived the gas and widespread panic, and the food shortages and looters and the initial round of flesh eaters themselves, had starved to death quite literally in the first few weeks following the attack – zombies it seemed had no preference for label or couture, everyone, including Dolce and Gabbana beauty queens, still went down the same way in the end.

The rec room was literally a gutted hall with material covering a hole in the front, featuring a well beaten pool table with the felt scored and stained, and a table with cards on it that looked equally damaged. There was an old Wurlitzer in the corner but its neon lights were off now. With the atmosphere like that of a tomb the last thing on anyone’s mind was listening to music. Once, soon after arriving, Nick told me a story about a car having been driven through it, and testament to Jason and his renegade posse, they sure knew how to bring a semblance of order back from the surrounding chaos. 

From the small kitchen area at the back a stew bubbled in a large galvanised pot. At least it constituted as stew, even if it really looked more like vomit. We sat, stone faced and weary-eyed as we ate our communal meal in relative silence. We did this at least once a day; eating together, food was so short we could no longer raid the refrigerator as we had in our former lives. Now each of us were forced to live on rations that were doled out by one of Jason’s crew with utterances of thanks like homeless bums feeding on the charity of strangers – in essence that was exactly what we had become.

Ordinarily the news of a death would have turned the least of us off our meal but like vermin we divided the deceased woman’s portion and hungrily devoured it without too much hesitation. There was no time for pity when we were all days or weeks away from the same possible fate ourselves. Dysentery. Diarrhoea. Once upon a time we would have taken a pill, maybe taken the day off work, laid around in bed all day drinking water and fighting to keep the chicken soup down. Now it was fatal. Everything we had once shrugged off or dismissed as an annoyance were now lethal enemies; a cough, a cold, a grazed knee, a fracture or dislocation. There were no doctors, no medical centres, no hospitals within a hundred mile radius that we were aware of, and certainly the little taken from the first aid kits in the Army jeeps were not designed to combat everything – as a society we had grown complacent and comfortable thinking science and medicine would always be around to save us. Oh how wrong we were. Dead wrong. And one slip up would mean our days were numbered. The thought was a very timely and sobering one.

“They’ll bury the body where we buried the others,” Nick informed us.

Though Jason was officially the man in charge he was, I came to learn, a man of even fewer words than Leon, but perhaps a fraction more than the one they called Wesker. The four of them sat at the head of one of the several long folding tables at the rear of the hall – that had once been used by the Army no doubt to notate the infected population and sort out the sick from the soon-to-be-dead – and they seldom said anything except amongst themselves.

“Why don’t we burn the dead?” I wondered. “I mean, aren’t we worried one of those things out there could find her and… I dunno, dig her up?”

Though it sounded ludicrous enough thankfully no one laughed. Again Nick, in his usual wary yet impulsive manner, was the one to tell me that burning them polluted the already tainted air.

“But at least she can’t come back without a body,” I said. “Those things, they’re attracted to blood among other things. What of they smell her and, I dunno, start crawling out of the woodwork or something?”

“Then we make sure we dig deep,” Wesker uttered, apparently having heard me from across the room. 

That, as far as everyone was concerned, was that, the conversation was over. But across the table David looked at me and said nothing. His eyes were narrowed with so many things he obviously wanted to say but spooning another sloppy heap of pea soup into his mouth he hunched his shoulders over the table and remained for the moment silent.


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When he told me later that he was accompanying the burial mission I was gob smacked.

“You can’t! Are you crazy? Those things are still out there, we don’t even know where they’re going!” I cried in regards to this alleged mass grave. “It’s too risky. You might die out there!”

David shrugged in his impassive way. “I could die in here too.” 

He opened a cupboard and hefted a bag from it, some faded dusty rucksack that smelled of fish and salt and dumped it with a clatter on the kitchen table. He had found it in his earlier rummaging and along with a few choice items had filled it with other things that could be used as potential weapons along with his sharpened stakes.

“You know what I think is funny? They took away our guns for our own protection they say, but they leave things like this laying around.” He contemplated a small serrated knife, the blade rusted to the hilt by the elements, touching the tip with a dour smirk. “What’s to stop one of us from going all Norman Bates and carving into one another while the rest of them sleep?”

Whether it was meant as a joke or something thought provoking I couldn’t answer, as I sat on the edge of the hut’s solitary bed and folded my arms in a huff.

Darkness had settled properly now and we had retired to our hut after the group meal despite the old adage of there being safety in numbers. I didn’t want to play pool or pretend to be happy with a game of poker while my mind was constantly fearful and haunted by dark memories. Outside, under the brooding sky that masked what had once been a blanket of stars, we were exposed now to unseen dangers. I’d heard talk since arriving that zombies were not the only threats we were up against anymore, though thankfully they were all I had seen since this whole ordeal had started. Each of us inside our modest huts that rattled in the salty breeze and whistled and moaned as the cool air settled in, had built little bubbles around ourselves, convinced that here in our new homes we were relatively safe and sheltered from the worst of what was out there – thoughts of anything to the contrary were more than just unhelpful they were also dangerous – no one could exist under such stressful conditions without food, water and rest – madness would surely spread faster than disease, lending credence to David’s earlier quip about someone in the camp suddenly flying into a homicidal rage. But rest was the last thing on my mind now, as weary as I was. Candle light flickered as the wick fought against the tide of pooling wax from its vantage point in the centre of the kitchen table in the centre of the room. We were low on food, gas and basic supplies. The generator that was used to run lights in parts of the camp and other pieces of equipment had to be used sparingly – and now Jason apparently wanted to risk more lives by taking this dead woman a quarter mile out to bury in the open. I was more than upset I was equally angry and terrified.

“You can’t do it,” I said, “You can’t go. It’s- it's suicide.”

David snorted rather than say anything as the silence of the night briefly settled inside the shack.


(continued)


-- Edited by Ravynlee on Sunday 26th of April 2009 10:40:50 PM

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“I don’t get it, what does he hope to gain? I know it sounds mean but I couldn’t care less if they cut her up and scattered her body over the fences,” I shrugged.

I knew such actions would only provoke the zombies, and I knew how selfish I sounded, but I was only speaking now to fill the void that his silence was leaving. But David was too distracted with his modest arsenal to pay me any attention, despite the fact I was staring at him intently. He set down the filleting knife and pondered one of his stakes with a frown. I had made an offhand comment when I first saw him crafting them, wondering if he knew we were fighting the undead and not vampires, (‘They just have to go through the head not the heart’, he had grumbled) but his wary glance and flat stubbled face made my smile fall away just as quickly. He had merely followed his most basic instinct from the moment they had taken our guns and ammunition off us to add to the minuscule stockpile – he had improvised, and now I was feeling like the joke was on me for not following his lead. But in that regard David too had a plan.

“They’ll no doubt give us our guns back if we go,” he uttered. “Then once we’re out there’s no way they can stop us. We take out any resistance and we head south. Away from the populated cities and head into the woods. At least there we might stand a chance; right now as we are we’re no better than sitting ducks.”

I was too distraught to argue. Just when I’d started to hope that he had given up on the idea and was starting to feel more integrated and safe here, here he was planning to use his sudden draft as a launching pad to escape out into the wild blue yonder again. I bowed my eyes, listening to the wind skimming across the water and bring that tainted smell of death through the barricades and barbed wire in through the gaps of the hut’s walls and windows. Eventually I drew my shoulders up and huffed out a decisive sigh.

“I don’t want to go,” I said.

David had settled on his chair at the end of the bed again with a groan. He scoffed and smirked and closed his eyes, bringing his legs up to rest on the foot of the mattress. He crossed his ankles, draped his arms across his scalp and held it firm by a wrist. He sighed heavily through his nose.

“You’re not my wife, Rae,” he said. “You can please yourself. But I’m not coming back for you.”

“No, I meant here. Permanently.”

“That’s your call.”

“But- why don’t you at least give this place a chance? It’s only been a few days and we’ve been on the move for ages. I know what you said before but I really don’t think… I think we can trust them.”

“Them? You mean Jason and his crew or your new friend?”

“What? Nick?” I almost scoffed. My smile dwindled unsurely as I sat watching for some expression to show on David’s face but saw none. “He’s just… I dunno. Lonely. He’s probably been without someone to talk to in ages, he’s just… trying to be helpful, that’s all.”

“He keeps staring at me the way he does he’ll be helping those things outside,” he muttered under his breath. “Fast food.”

I pulled a face and snorted in offence. “I’m sure he doesn’t mean anything by it.”

“Uh hu,” David grunted. “I’m sure he doesn’t.”

“What?” I asked, and then repeated it to his impassive silence. 

If there was a point to be made I wasn’t getting it, but I was getting something else and my smile finally died with a nervous twitch, thinking it wasn’t just my imagination that he sound almost jealous. I scoffed then, reaffirming his previous silence. He sat brooding, leaning back in his chair, his stakes never far from reach as I settled onto my side on the mattress and pulled up my share of the covers.

In silence I lay there lost to thought, trying not to strain my ears to the sounds of the boats still rattling against the harbour. Though I knew it would hurt I relived all my brief moments of happiness in the months just gone before it was all so cruelly snatched away. Discreetly I smeared my eyes and fought to relax against the pillow that no longer smelled of anyone, just damp. The wind howled and the candlelight flickered in a last act of defiance, drowning despite its best efforts in a pool of melted wax. Then with a sizzle and hiss darkness once more settled over us and took hold.


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Twilight and the men were assembling out the front of the rec hall.

I stood watching a measured distance away, just outside of the hut, holding onto the neck of my jersey with fingers that refused to stop shaking. Every fibre in me wanted to race over and join them as they gathered their equipment and rations. Shovels were handed out. Rifles and a small ration of bullets soon followed. I caught David’s glance as he nodded to me, and noted the strange smirk that had sprung up from nowhere. As he stood there with his shotgun in hand I knew then that his intentions hadn’t changed. He was still planning on leaving as soon as the coast was clear and nothing I could say or do was about to change that. Guilt buried me. Suddenly movement at my side stole my attentions.

“Men,” Jill remarked, puffing out a ribbon of cigarette smoke from her arced lips. She raised her chin in the air and made a sound like a laugh but it was tainted in bitterness. I watched her flick her cigarette butt into the mud and crush it under the toe of her boot with a hiss. “Give them a weapon and watch the testosterone fly. Look at them, they’re like little boys on Christmas morning.”

I smirked and sighed. “Christmas,” I said. That one word struck too many nerves in me that almost brought fresh tears to my eyes. I blinked up at the sky, at the horrid clouds that always choked it now, remembering the spectacle of the sun’s first rays and how it used to light up the world, seeming to bring the city back to life. I scoffed at that thought and wrapped my arms around myself tighter.

“This is crazy. They shouldn’t be going,” I said.

Jill looked down over me. She reminded me of my mother for the briefest of moments. “What, you don’t want to eat for the next few weeks?”

I frowned back at her, confused.

“I thought they were just going out there to bury that girl,” I said.

Jill nodded. “That too. It’s also a scouting party. Once they bury her they’ll keep moving north in search of more supplies.” She scoffed and folded her arms mirroring me. “What, did you think we were just going to sit here and wait until the dust settles before we head back out again to hunt? It’s more efficient this way. Less risk, less time wasted. Kill two birds with one stone,” she smiled.

I almost shuddered at the wording of her analogy.

So they left, with water and shovels and rifles in hand, and skipped out on a jeep not all that dissimilar to the ones that had been abandoned outside. Watching the vehicle amble towards the gate and the gate open, I was struck with the realisation of what was happening before me. Though up until that point I had been hoping that David would change his mind and back out at the last minute, there was no parting words, no waves or smiles of condolence as they passed through and the gate closed behind them and reality struck like a mallet slamming into the back of my head. I dropped to my knees and swooned face down into the mud. The last thing I heard was Jill’s voice raised in concern but I didn’t hear what she said let alone to whom. I woke up again some time later not knowing what day it was or time. All I could feel was this cold sensation, a physical pressure bearing down on me, suffocating me, and I was too weak and too helpless to fight it.

Zombies could have attacked at that moment and I wouldn’t have resisted, I had, in my selfish way of thinking, nothing except my life left to lose anymore – and that’s when something happened.


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-- Edited by Ravynlee on Sunday 26th of April 2009 10:52:41 PM

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“When did you have your last period?” Jill inquired.


I frowned at her. She sat on the chair, where David usually sat to sleep, with her head bowed, watching her cigarette lighter dangle between her fingers.

“I’m not asking because I think it’s funny, I’m just saying it’s possible.”

I shook my head still saying nothing. I squeezed the pillow against my chest tighter as I rocked back and forth on the edge of the mattress, indeed the very picture of insanity, struggling to pull myself together.

“Have you- you know?” she urged. I couldn’t stand the smirk on her face. She reminded me of one of those tough kids on the playground that used to get the weaker kids to do their bidding just by looking at them. “That big guy you came in with?”

“Yeah,” I uttered. I screwed my face up and winced. “No.”

Jill chuckled. “Hon, you did or you didn’t, it’s none of my business-”

“No, I mean…” I started. My head was still light and spinning as it had been earlier hindering rational thought. It was further exacerbated by memories. With a dry mouth and burning eyes I pouted and took my time before speaking. “There was a guy,” I sighed, “before… this.”

“Where is he now? Gone?”

“In more ways than one,” I murmured. Words were barely registering above a hoarse whisper. “He… saved me from this… guy, zombie, this place where I was staying. We were friends ever since then. Six months, give or take. Feels like a lifetime now.”

“What happened?”

My mouth hung open but the words refused to come out. “He got bit… a few towns back. He tried to tell me but I wouldn’t listen. I didn’t want to think about it. Couldn’t.”

“You killed him?”

I shook my head. In my guilt I saw no need to point out the obvious paradox in killing someone that was technically already dead. I closed my eyes and struggled mentally not to relive it. In my mind I was back in that barn, up in that dry hayloft, screaming my heart out as the rifle shot forth out of the shadows. I heard David bark at me to move but I couldn’t comply. I thrust my arm out on impulse and shoved the barrel away. The explosion was deafening. Something dragged me across the floor. Screams. Terror. Chaos. I opened my eyes and shook my head at Jill attempting to deflect the implications now with a weak tight-lipped smile.

“I’m just tired,” I said. “Grieving… I haven’t even had a chance to deal with it yet. It’s probably a lot of things.”

“Maybe,” Jill uttered. The look on her face attested she thought otherwise. Without the usual aid of doctors or chemists there was no real way of knowing. The nearest drug store in the local vicinity lay outside the boundary of The Park’s barricades, in a blackened pile of ash and twisted metal. 

“When the others come back we can send out one or two in search of a drug store,” she ventured, but I shook my head before she’d had a chance to finish.

“Maybe you are and maybe you’re not,” she said, “But bringing a kid into this isn’t as easy as you’d think it is. I’m not talking about possible complications, not to mention your health with no food, little water and disease, but… a kid would be more of a hindrance than a help right now. Those things react to sound and movement just like the rest of us do. How far do you think you’re going to get with a screaming baby strapped to your back? How do you defend it, and yourself, if you can’t even hold a gun?” She shrugged. I saw the conflict in her eyes, the sympathy in her smile, but her face was set with the snarl of indignation. With a sigh Jill shook her head and smiled at me. She wrapped her hand around my forearm. She didn’t have to say anything more – nor did I have to question her motives. We sat in silence letting the words linger and fade off into the cool salty sea breeze.

Eventually she went to stand and mentioned something about discussing it with Jason. I panicked.

“No!” I said, “We can’t tell anyone yet. Like you said, it’s probably nothing.” I rambled on something about there being enough to contend with at the moment with food shortages and such, stopping short on concluding maybe I had picked up the bug that had so recently killed the other lady. At that train of thought I wasn’t sure which option I feared more and fell dubiously silent. Reluctantly Jill nodded and soon went on her way. 

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The day drew on, seemingly longer than any that went before it. Eventually dusk approached and panic and fear began to creep in as the temperatures dropped. As badly as I yearned to bathe in the boiled water I refrained, trying to distract myself from thoughts of long hot showers of the past with others less provoking – but I was too unsettled. Jill had been manning the old CB radio that Wesker had managed to wrangle together, but the hiss and static seemed never ending. The prospect that we were all that was left in quite possibly the entire country, if not the world in our fear, was numbing. I didn’t want my last words to David to have been said in spite – but then again he was probably already long gone by now I thought, brought down a fraction further by the prospect that even if the others had ran into trouble David, in his self-preserving way, had abandoned ship within minutes of leaving and had been far out of danger when and if it had eventually gone down. Maybe, a nagging voice in the back of my head chided, he had somehow caused it. But I shook my head and tried not to think about anything beyond the moment anymore. Needless to say when we heard the familiar rumble of an engine approach we were beside ourselves, at least I was, with more apprehension than relief. As the only one in Jason’s posse left in his stead, Jill was the one to ascertain the threat level and make sure the vehicle coming in was the same one, and in the same condition, as the one that went out earlier. The familiar voice of Leon, in his usual cool and detached manner, was a comfort, as we watched the vehicle roll in through the gates – and that’s when I saw her – a young dark haired woman, weak, obviously unconscious, wrapped up in David’s arms.

Well, at least he came back, I thought. It was followed an instant later by a seething ball of something unspeakable inside. I watched as the woman was carefully manoeuvred off the jeep and the men disbanded, hefting out bags of what I could only surmise was food along with them. I stood there frozen like a statue in the coagulating mud as the woman was taken in one direction and the haul of supplies taken in the other. I watched as David glimpsed at me, bowed his head, and without uttering so much as a word, trudged off after the newest arrival. 



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This is my update to go before DL's last - just so they tie in together. 
Jess, your character is in this one.  Unconscious, but mentioned.


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Tapping my knuckles against the door I drew the collar around my neck tighter and waited. Footsteps crossed the boards. The door creaked open and Wesker bowed out. He nodded at me in acknowledgement. He didn’t say anything as he held the door aloft, waited for me to catch it, and continued walking back across the park. I watched him walk away and thought twice about following. Hesitantly I made my way inside. The smell of disinfectant was overpowering. They must have found it during the hunt I assumed. That or they had used what they had in storage to sterilize the hut as best they could to stave off further spread of diseases. Though it was predominately dark inside save for one or two candles with a quick sweep of my eyes I realised how similar it was to mine. With a click I gently closed the door behind me.

“How is she?” I wondered.

David shrugged and didn’t elaborate. He had been sitting at the woman’s bedside for hours now, since the party had returned, not even leaving when Jill inspected the woman’s body to make sure she bore no tell-tale marks of the infected. Given he hadn’t said a word to me, let alone come out to join the somewhat celebratory feast that Jason’s crew had modestly assembled, I was worried and curious to know what had happened during their hunt. Questions burdened me; I just didn’t know how or where to start.

“What happened?” I asked.

I approached the young woman’s bedside and stood opposite him. His head was bowed making it impossible to search for answers. As he sat in silence saying nothing, I studied the woman between us marvelling at how young she now looked up close. She couldn’t have been any older than 16 I thought, but in the half-light and framed in shadows it was hard to tell anything definitively. So young and so innocent, I thought. Then I remembered overhearing talk in the rec hall that she had been brought in with an arsenal of blades upon her, and in particular some kind of sword that someone said looked Samurai in appearance. I smiled weakly wondering what kind of answers this young girl with the deadly weapons was keeping from us in her slumber. I touched her arm and flinched at the coolness of her skin.

“Fever,” David muttered without raising his eyes from her. “Found her in the mud along the river bank. At first I thought she was one of them. She wasn’t moving. I went to pop her neck and realised there was a pulse there. So I alerted the others.”

I wrapped my arms tighter around myself and nodded. Silence settled unabated. A minute passed, followed by another. All I could hear over the sound of our collective breaths, and my pounding heart, was that of the light breeze skipping across the water, making the boats dance like wooden skeletons. I cleared my throat and drew the blankets up a little higher over the woman. I waited. Reluctantly David looked at me.

“What happened?” I urged. “You came back. I thought you were gone.”

“I was,” he said simply. 

He explained that on the outskirts of some neighbouring town they located the mass grave and buried the woman beside it. They then travelled into the town itself. It was, David uttered, familiar territory to Jason, but he wouldn’t elaborate as to how. They had split up in teams and were sent to houses and businesses to locate what they could by way of supplies. Once out of sight David said he slipped away and made a dash back toward the river bank as planned. He spotted the woman and carried her back t the vehicle. Something about his tone suggested he had been in two-minds about his decision and it apparently still ate away at him as he sat brooding now. In a strange way he looked like a parent sitting at the bedside of a loved one who was slowly passing away. There were no monitors, no hiss of machines, no drip or medicines or nursing staff to add to the scene. In the darkness, in the flickering candle light, it resembled something from a bygone time, before science and technology had permeated our lives. I nodded to show I had been listening.

“So why did you come back?” I added against my better judgement.

Though I waited David continued to sit there and didn’t respond.

Excusing myself I made my way out and returned to my hut in silence.


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Resident of OUR TOWN
Resident & Admin of DLoD
~ 'Shane' is my virtual world ~


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If I'm not here, I'm there.


~ ModMother / The Cougar ~

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The haul had not been as great as Jason and his team had no doubt been hoping. Though it had been something of a success, the fact we had taken in yet another mouth to feed meant that what we had obviously was not going to last the camp as long as it would have otherwise. The men had managed to find a few bottles of bleach, disinfectant, and general household cleaners to help keep on top of sanitation, but zombies had prevented them taking as much as they would have liked. Clothes, blankets, water, a jerry can or two of fuel, but no ammo, and a few basic tins of food that for the most part were without a use-by date or label. Despite the feast he had thrown the night before in which he himself had not been in attendance, and which had been more to boost general morale than to gorge ourselves on what food we had, Jason was obviously distressed about the situation. I hadn’t seen him at all since returning.


The day was fine, warm, but unpredictable. The wind was coming and going and penetrating the camp from a new direction every few minutes. I looked up at the sky above and nestled my jacket closer around my shoulders. Was it autumn or summer I wondered - who could tell anymore?

I half expected to find David in the strange woman’s hut again but to my surprise he was not. As the camp stirred to life some time after dawn I found him outside, standing in front of some damaged window, a bucket of water nearby, running a blade of some sort across his scalp. I stopped and smiled to myself, dogged by memories I had left buried so many months and towns ago. My smile was sad and weak and it didn’t last long. In the glass, that still bore the puncture wounds of several stray bullets, David had obviously noticed me, stopped, turned his head to the side with his usual soulless stare, before he resumed shaving.

“What?” he murmured.

Taking it as my que I started to approach him. Then I stopped. The surrounding camp was still quiet and groggy from the effects of a long eventful day beforehand, and no one was walking around that I could see - but the light was still on in Jason’s home. Apparently he was not one for sleeping. I stood a few feet away beside the rec room, with my back to what was left of the front wall, watching David rinse off the blade in the bucket and assess himself via his dusty reflection. In typical fashion he left his stubble to grow, a strong visual contrast between his clean shaven head and the dark sinister growth that framed the lower half of his face. I heard another voice chuckle and realised immediately that David was not alone. It took me a minute of searching the darkness from my vantage point to see Nick sitting there on an upturned trash can, sucking away on the butt of a cigarette.

“You know in the Middle Ages,” he said, squinting through the smoke haze, “the only people who used to shave their heads were like the executioners or some ****.”

“Fascinating,” David murmured, towelling himself down.

“Is that what you think you are?” Nick s nig gered, “Judge, jury and executioner?”

David slid his eyes across and his shoulders rose and fell with a sigh.

“What are you, the village idiot?” he answered, stopping Nick’s intended laugh before it really set in. “You think it’s funny? You want to see how far you can get when one of those things grabs you by your hair and stops you in your tracks. Don’t think it can happen? Wait a while. I’ve seen those things tear a human limb from limb using nothing but teeth and fingers. I’m not going out like that. The less they can grab onto the better.”

For a little while both men were silent. Birds flew overhead distracting them. Snatching up a black wife beater David shoved his arms through it and wrenched it down. When he looked up again Nick was again smiling at him.

“So why do you wear that?” Nick pointed out, raising his chin in the air in David’s general direction. The Star of David stood out in a flash of silver against his chest hair. David glimpsed down at it and picked it up between his fingers.

“You Jewish?” Nick urged.

David frowned, pursed his lips, and slipped the small star back inside his clothes securely.

“I was,” he admitted eventually. “Once. In a past life.”

“So why do you still wear it? Surely you don’t believe in God now, not after all this sh*t,” Nick pressed. “I don’t know about you, but what happened to all those Bible bashers and Televangelists that got turned into one of those things? If there is a God I’d be pretty pissed he didn’t save his so called chosen people, that’s for sure.”

Again David sighed. He stood staring distantly somewhere between the end of his nose and the ground. He drew in a deep breath and seemed to refocus his attentions.

“This wasn’t God,” he said regarding the war and the effects that soon followed, “This was something else.”

“But you still believe right? You still think that all those billions of people that died or are walking around out there making a meal of their fellow man; you think there’s still a place for them in Heaven?”

“People need something to believe in,” David uttered, “some hope. Otherwise what are we living for?”

A distant smile once more tugged at my lips as I stood listening.

“Wow. That’s deep,” Nick scoffed, “especially coming from someone like you.”

“What’s the supposed to mean?”

“Nothing,” Nick shrugged. 

He tossed his cigarette butt aside and got to his feet. He approached the other man with a confident swagger to his step. He came to a stop and stood smirking, his smirk growing to a grin that exploded in a chuckle so ominous it made the hairs on the back of my neck stand up. Ignoring the flat stare David was affording him; Nick leant forward and winked at him.

“So did you do it?”

“Do what?”

“You know what I’m talking about,” Nick taunted. He didn’t sound like the little weasel he had been when we first met a handful of nights ago. In fact he sounded dead opposite. “I knew that I knew you from somewhere when you first walked in, I just couldn’t pick it to start with,” he said, “and then it hit me. I’d seen you before, on the news years ago. You were that one that murdered your girlfriend right and got locked up in that mental asylum? Voices told you to do it?” Nick smirked. “I thought they sentenced you to the chair. Looks like you beat the system in a big way. Lucky you, no wonder you don’t talk about it. I mean, just the fact that billions of people, good innocent people, kids, old people, had to die like they did, and people like you got to live out of the whole wide world, you, a murdering Jew… talk about injustice, huh?”

(continued)


-- Edited by Ravynlee on Friday 1st of May 2009 04:48:57 PM

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I slumped back against the wall, reeling at the news. My head was spinning. My heart was pounding so hard I could practically see it. I was stunned, I almost laughed aloud but something internal stopped me, strangling all other sounds beyond a tight wince. But I didn’t have time to do anything as movement startled me. Jason was on his way towards me, no doubt headed for the rec room. Not wanting to be seen eavesdropping I quickly bowed my head, gave a tight smile in his direction and started walking – I didn’t have a destination in mind other than to just keep moving. I didn’t even hear a response from David, if there had been one, hoping more than anything he hadn’t seen me standing there listening. Why hadn’t he told me, I asked myself, why hadn’t I suspected? But I was too shaken to really think clearly, trying to reason Nick must have had it wrong, the man I knew only killed out of necessity, but still the cold seed of doubt had been planted into my subconscious and bore its way in like a splinter.

My blind, aimless wanderings were short lived as I heard Jill call out and Jason emerge from the rec room. She was waving and pointing towards the coastline. I stopped in fear, all thoughts stalled, as Jason raced past me and climbed the steps to meet her on the barricade. Wesker soon joined them. The trio were muttering amongst themselves. Immediately I could tell by the hurried pace and tone of their voices that something was out there. Then I heard a low rumble, like thunder, making its way towards us. Immediately following came the distinct pop of gun shots. Though they were distant I still flinched and cowered as if I were being shot at. Finding shelter behind the nearest object I hid behind the Jeep’s rear bumper and tucked myself into a tight ball. Jason was descending the stairs. He was in a panic.

“What is it?” I asked, walking backwards.

My mind was suddenly firing at the prospect of all sorts of dangers gathering out there beyond those safe walls and my heart was practically a cold rock sinking inside of my chest. But Jason didn’t hear me. Maybe he was too distracted to respond, or didn’t want to. He whistled and seemed to pluck a rifle out of the air – that’s when I saw Leon swing into the vehicle and realised he must have thrown it. I backed up as the jeep roared to life and the gates started to open.

“Are you sure you want to do this?” Jill cried down to them. 

Behind her Wesker tracked the progress of the distraction outside using the scope of his 12 gauge rifle. Jason nodded and Leon wrenched the gear stick with his face set in determination. I stood rooted to the mud not even realising people were suddenly milling behind me as Jason and Leon sped out of The Park and the gates creaked to a close, shutting us in and our beloved leader out to face the danger on our behalf, whatever it was.


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Now that should fit in to the very end of DarknessLover's last post, so we have a sense of consistency. I got there in the end ;)
Now the next posts I'm on my own and DL (when/if) he responds, has to play catch up - I actually wrote DL out of the park briefly so he can write himself back in when he's ready, thus giving me the oppertunity to continue on without him for now. Hope that's okay!


-- Edited by Ravynlee on Friday 1st of May 2009 04:53:37 PM

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Everything was perfectly clear the second I opened my eyes. Gunshots - gunshots had woken me up, and waking up meant I wasn't dead. Not being dead meant I had been rescued. There was a very limited list of rescuers. The river I had been following ... the structure I had seen ... the humans that had to live there. Or rather, here. But the first thing I really thought of was Trinity. And how she was gone. I wasn't certain how I knew, but I did, and it hurt more in that second than all of the long months I'd been without human contact. That would have to be fixed.

I barely took note of the lumpy bed, the threadbare covers, the flickering, colorless candles. All I knew was that Trinity wasn't on my body or in the room, and some sort of instincts propelled me towards the door before my conscious mind even realized it was there. I stumbled on my first step, but caught myself on a chair sitting next to the bed and shoved forward again.

My footing on the perfectly level ground wasn't any better by the time I made it to the door, but I put it down to too long a period on inaction. After all, I felt fine - better than fine. Wonderful. Everything was so clear, so simple, it practically sparkled.

Except perhaps the doorknob, which was most definitely un-sparkly. I rattled it both ways before figuring out I hadn't rattled it far enough. A minor setback.

I burst out the door, more or less oblivious to my surrounding and pushed away from the doorframe in a seemingly random direction. My intuition - which, I noticed, had never been quite so keen - told me that I would find Trinity ... that-a-way. I managed to stay upright mainly because I had too much forward momentum to fall.

It seemed like both a very long and very short amount of time before someone grabbed my arm. Finally, I started to fall backwards, and whoever it was caught me, fairly easily. In a way it was a relief - I was tired as soon as I stopped moving - but I still struggled. They had obviously taken Trinity away from me, but I had no intention of letting them keep her.

"Hey, hey, calm down," the female voice said soothingly, then added, much more quietly, "You're burning up. Must still have a fever."

"I feel fine!" I hissed, trying to at least twist around to get a good look at her.

"Don't they always," she sighed. I gave up, and she released her hold a bit. "You do realize you were about to walk into the river, right?"

Oh. No, I hadn't. I blinked. Maybe things weren't quite as sparkly as previously thought. Maybe I did have a fever. Maybe I was delirious. But, don't they say that if you're delirious, you don't think you are? Or is that madness? Maybe I was going insane -

"You still with me?"

"Yes!" I snapped. Then, since she had saved me from a watery doom, I said it again, more nicely. When another thought struck my head, I asked, "Are you the one who ... brought me here?"

"No. No, it wasn't me," she replied softly. "That was David."

I sensed, depite the fact that I'd never been good at reading people, that there was much more behind those three words than simple letters. But while I was inwardly squirming over whether it was appropriate to ask further questions or not, she spoke again.

"I'm Rae, by the way. You're ... ?"

I hesitated. "Ah ..." She waited silently. When ... when did I forget my name? "T-Trin - Trinity."

"Sounds like a name with a story behind it."

Something like that, yeah. I didn't respond out loud. After a second, Rae pulled me to my feet and started taking me back to the building I had been in, murmuring something about getting me back to bed until my fever broke. I let her.

...Three months without human contact. But when did I forget my own name? When did I forget ... everything? Three months of fighting, killing, running - but what happened before that?

Who was I?

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