Less Than Human

Less Than Human by Tim Meyer Page B

Book: Less Than Human by Tim Meyer Read Free Book Online
Authors: Tim Meyer
Ads: Link
red smears on the glass.
    “Remember that friend I was telling you about?” Josh asked.
    “ Yeah.”
    “ Well, that's him. And I'm pretty sure we shouldn't keep him waiting.”
    As if on cue, the glass shattered. The dead stumbled inside, bumping into each other, jockeying for the lead. Many of them tripped over themselves, falling to the ground. The zombies able to keep their balance trampled their counterparts, heading toward their food source.
     
    T he group appeared in the recreation center's entrance. Ben spotted them immediately. He saw Josh with other people—other living people—and instantly became excited with the prospect of other survivors. Josh led them while a legion of zombies hurdled after them. The zombies clumsily followed, many of them falling to the ground while the more aggressive creatures stepped on them without care.
    Ben saw some of his followers abandon their efforts, seeking the easier meal. The park ranger raised his shotgun and blew the head off of an approaching zombie. Ben watched its head disappear, bits of brain-meat raining on the wooden steps. He pumped and aimed, taking out the next contender in similar fashion.
    “Into the car! Hurry!” Josh commanded.
    Ben stretched across the seat, popping the lock on the passenger's door. It's gonna be a tight fit, Ben thought to himself, adding up the bodies that were going to squeeze into his four-door sedan.
    As soon as Ben completed that thought, he watched the older woman trip on a loose deck board. She fell hard on the ground. This would have been painful to watch under ordinary circumstances, but the dozens of hungry dead folk ready to pounce on her made his adrenaline kick harder. The others didn't hear her cries for help over the crowd of dead cannibals. Their animalistic groans reminded Ben of wind swooshing through an open field.
    Ben rolled his window down, yelled something along the lines of, “Hey!” and pointed behind the survivors. Only Victoria understood what Ben was implying. She turned, seeing Ruth struggle to her feet. It was too late. The dead swarmed her. They grabbed her, pinned her down, and clawed at her flesh with dark, dirty, and—in most cases— already-bloodied fingernails. They tore her open like a Christmas present. The old woman tried to scream but her throat filled up with blood. No one would have heard her over the raucous noise of the zombie drove anyway.
    “ No!” Victoria screamed. She began to double-back, but the zombies had shredded through most of the old woman's muscle, reaching her bones. What was left was no longer recognizable, a life-size lump of bloody sinew. Her head had detached during the carnage, rolled across the deck like a weakly thrown bowling ball. Victoria's mouth dropped, color fleeing from her face.
    The zombies continued their slaughter, uncaring.
    “Shoot the fucker!” Josh yelled. He grabbed Victoria, turning her away from the clutches of a nearby walker. She had been so lost in the living nightmare that she hadn't seen it coming, nor did she hear her daughters' warning.
    Ranger Steve stepped forward, lining the end of his shotgun with the head of the closest zombie. The groaning corpse had a flap of Ruth's skin dangling from its mouth like a long string of spaghetti. One pull on the trigger and the zombie's head disappeared, leaving behind a misty crimson cloud.
    Emily slid into the back of Ben's car. Glancing out of her window and seeing more than six ravenous expressions eagerly wanting in, she shrieked. They pawed the window like cats playing with bits of string. If the glass wasn't between them, Emily knew she would've been torn to shreds much like the old lady.
    Brittany came next, sitting in the middle. Quickly, she shielded Emily's eyes, waiting to find out what had happened to their mother. Seeing their only parent become part the dead horde's feast was the last thing Emily needed. “Don't look, sweet pea.”
    “Don't call me sweet pea, ” she snapped, hating the

Similar Books

Mad Cows

Kathy Lette

Inside a Silver Box

Walter Mosley

Irresistible Impulse

Robert K. Tanenbaum

Bat-Wing

Sax Rohmer

Two from Galilee

Marjorie Holmes