Read Dead City Online

Authors: Lee J Isserow

Dead City

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Dead City

 

By

Lee J Isserow

 

 

Copyright © 2016 Lee Isserow
All rights reserved.

 
1

 

 

 

 

It had been forty-six years since the release of George Romero's Night Of The Living Dead, and forty-six years since the dead stopped dying. Some people said the movie was a hypersigil, an accidental magick that turned fantasy into reality. Others with limited vocabulary and a lower IQ blamed free love, homosexuality, and as time went on, gay marriage.

After twenty years of mounting fear, the governments of the world did what they always do when they don't have a legitimate solution to a problem. They built a wall. Forty foot high by ten foot thick, brick or concrete at either side with a centre lining of steel two foot deep, to prevent tunnelling through. The only entrance to each Dead City was a single gate operated from the outside, by the living for the dead. The walls were manned by armed guards every half-mile. Not that guns were necessarily effective, other than to remove limbs or ventilate the skull. The latter worked insomuch as a pulse-lacking foe missing chunks of brain might momentarily forget their innate lust for flesh. But despite guns not being able to keep the dead down, they made the living feel safe, and governments were almost exclusively made of and for the living.
Whereas in days of olde, towns would have walls surrounding them, these days every major city had walls at its heart. The undead – or 'unliving', as they preferred to be called – were rounded up upon being born into unlife, and placed inside the walls, where they were to spend the rest of their supernaturally reanimated post-lives.

As the moon hung in the sky, glimpsed through clouds of dusk reds and twilight purples, the walls of the London Dead City stood proud beyond the South Bank of the Thames, a monolithic silhouette in the night. Stretching out from Waterloo, the walls followed the train bridges east and south, turning in at London Bridge and Brixton respectively to meet at Deptford. Five square miles of abandoned London, reserved exclusively for those returned from the grave, with almost eleven miles of wall to keep them in. As the clock struck nine, the guards at the Southwark outpost swapped shifts, shared a smoke and exchanged small talk, unaware of the skinny hooded shadow running towards the wall just a quarter mile away. The figure held her breath, in case she be spotted from the mere movement of her lungs. Blonde hair under black hoodie, skin ivory white in the moonlight, Sarah closed her eyes and thought of her father. His kind ocean blue eyes and wrinkle-etched forehead. He needed her to do this, even though she knew he would never approve if he were to find out what she was about to do. Reaching into a scruffy backpack, she withdrew the grappling hook that had been provided to her by her informant.

She called him her 'informant', even though 'guy she met at the pub' was probably more accurate. Sarah had worked there for two years, and he was a new face, mouthing off about how he jumped the walls all the time 'for larks'. As she asked him about it, he revealed he'd done more than just broken in. He had contacts on the inside that were willing to break the rules for the right price.

Checking one final time for observers, she swung the hook high into the sky, praying for a near-silent impact. The
clang
was louder than hoped, and she dropped to the ground, hiding in the shadow of the wall. After moments in fear, waiting for guards to rain down upon her, she stood back up and began ascending. Her thin, pale hands held to the rope for dear life. Despite knots tied for hand and footholds, the sheer height of the drop below was making her porcelain palms sweaty, and grip on the rope weaker. Reaching the top, she crawled up and lay flat on the peak, just as instructed by her informant. He had physically taken her through the routine and position to lie in, with only a small amount of groping. He cupped unnecessarily as he told her to put her bottom flat, and breath from the diaphragm, not from the lungs. She could forgive his wandering hands, she'd definitely had worse, and it was certainly a small sacrifice. After waiting again, in case her presence had been spotted, she hoisted the rope up slowly, placed the grapple on the other side of the wall, and after testing its integrity,  began her descent into the borough of the life-impaired.

The roads of Dead City were not cared for as those outside the wall. Trash piled up, detritus escaping from the mounds on the wind and whistling along unkempt roads. Buildings long forgotten by living hands looked down on her with sad cracked-window eyes, like abandoned geriatrics in an old age home, hoping the next face that passes might be familiar, and yet it never would be. The street lighting flickered, a sickly neon yellow glow cast over her, as Sarah began a steady, purposeful walk. Reaching back into her bag, she withdrew a hand-drawn map, a line taking her from the point of arrival to her destination, sticking to main roads, avoiding alleyways where God-knows-what might be lying in wait.

As she passed boarded up buildings and side streets her stride hastened, the sound of unknown fiends echoing around her. Growls and mutters, whispers and whimpers, she couldn't imagine what savage monsters lay beyond her line of sight, and didn't wish to find out.

Finally, her destination was in view. An old casino, abandoned before the walls were built. Bold signage in a rainbow of colours, faux-velvet curtains withered by time and moths hung over the windows. Whatever lay beyond them was not for the view of casual passers-by.
Approaching the entrance, a behemoth of an unman emerged from the shadows of the doorway, his face half decayed, a worm nonchalantly weaving its way through his septum like a slimy living nose ring.

“What have we got here?” said the brute, his voice scratching, wheezy breath through lungs long ago worn through.

“I have an appointment.” she replied, trying to hide the quiver on her lips, the intense fear riding through her body.

“Right this way.” he gestured for her to enter, a smile crawling its way up what was left of his putrefying face.

She entered, followed by the slowly decomposing ogre, past rusting slot machines and dust covered roulette tables, to a room at the back with a sign marking it as 'private'.
She turned to the bouncer, who gestured with a giant, festering hand for her to continue onwards.

The room deep in the heart of the casino was vastly different to everything else she had seen in Dead City, a tasteless opulence of velvet flocked wallpaper, furniture carved of oak, mahogany and pine all nestled together, unscathed by time and neglect, but mismatching nonetheless. At the centre of the room, behind a large wooden desk, sat the Necromancer.

Older – he would often tell people – than London itself. His long, unkempt hair had centuries earlier taken a life of
its
own, weaving its way under his skin, burrowing deep and continuing to grow out, over (or perhaps though) his eyes, burying itself back in at his jaw and out again at the neck, where it rested on his shoulders. His vision appeared all but obscured. “But I still see everything.” he would say, when some fool would query it. Not long before the Necromancer had his bouncer tear off a limb and insert it into the fool where an entire limb should not fit under normal circumstances.

He offered her a seat and Sarah took it, silent, unsure how to word her request. Her heart was beating so hard in her chest, she wondered if she could talk at all if she tried.

“What do you wish of me?” he hissed, a sickly smile crawling up his atrophying cheeks.

“It's my father” Sarah replied. “He's sick.”

“Mine is not to heal the sick.” hissed the creature. “But to return the life.”

“He's dying. Nobody can help him.” she paused, hoping she didn't cause offence. “Nobody alive, that is.” she tried to maintain eye contact with where she thought his eyes might be.

“Nobody alive indeed.” another smile. “You have what I asked?” his fingers rapped on the table one by one in anticipation of the gift she had for him.
The young girl reached into her bag and withdrew a  jar. A thick red stain washed up against the glass, trickling back down slowly as she rested it on the table. He took it, twisting off the lid and inhaled deeply.

“Aah, it's so hard to acquire fresh menstrual blood these days.” he said, sealing the jar and placing it in a drawer of the desk, opening another to find her purchase, taking a vial of luminescent yellow liquid and placing it in her hand.

“This will ward off your progenitor's death... for now.” he said, as she stuffed it into the bag, and turned to leave.

“Thank you” she muttered, hurrying herself out of the door.
The streets away from the casino were still empty as she strode back to her point of arrival, but the presence of those that lay beyond the shadows had grown. The rumours of fresh meat seemed to have spread amongst the unliving, and the ravenous creatures were lusting from their coves in alleys and behind window panes.

Her walk became hurried, as she looked around, feeling eyes from the darkness watching her from every angle. She saw nothing, but imagined everything, every nightmare, every possible monster under the bed, every demon or devil she had ever seen in a movie.

The
click-clack
of her tiny feet on the pavement drew them out, beckoned them forth, and without thinking, she broke into a run.
The map in her hands, she turned a corner, speeding straight, then another corner, looking behind her at every possible moment, in case she were followed. Dropping the map as she came to the last turn, the girl rounded the corner, as ice cold skeletal hands grabbed her. She tried to scream, but there was no voice in her throat, an inhuman, decaying beast stood over her. His back hunched, yet still he stood almost two feet taller than her,
jaw hanging loose as if dislocated and never put back into place. It looked like it was holding on for dear life at the base of its skull by threads of fragile skin that, like the rest of his epidermis, was
practically translucent, useless grey veins etched along it as if drawn in pencil. The living nightmare gasped at her with breath whistling through holes in his chest, guttural sounds with the scent of rotting eggs that she heard as:

“Freeeeesh meeeeaaaat!”
She struggled for freedom, as he lunged his head towards her, useless jaw flapping as he arched his neck. She felt his dry tongue scrape up the side of her face like sandpaper, and a gust of gentle, stinking wind as he inhaled her. Sarah's limbs went limp and she began to lose consciousness. Her mind started going blank, the fear dissipating, every feeling vanishing, and she wondered with her last thoughts if this experience was her soul being sucked from her body.

Then from nowhere, a flash, and a unholy
crunch
. The beast's grip on her loosened and all she could feel was falling, then nothingness.

When she came to, she didn't know how much time had passed. The ghoul's body was crawling around in the road in search of its moaning head, which was lodged in a drain farther down the street. Looking up, a silhouette stood over her. The rim of a trilby obscured her rescuer's face, long coat trailing in the wind, his right hand clutched a baton with electricity dancing on the tip. He reached down for her hand and helped her up, his grip strong and warm. She looked into his eyes and saw life.

“I don't know what you're doing here, or whether that's contraband...” he said, referring to the vial of luminescent liquid, which had fallen out of her bag during the assault. “Now get yourself back over the wall, and don't
ever
come back here again.”
His face showed no signs of comfort or care, as if he wasn't helping her because it was the right thing to do, but because it was his job. He looked around to the darkness, to the creatures massing beyond it. The sounds of the unseen demons faded as they withdrew, as if knowing she was under his protection. He didn't make an introduction, nor did he attempt conversation as he lead her to her point of entry and watched her climb back up, until she disappeared over the top of the wall followed by the rope.
“Same thing every night...” he said under his breath, as he turned from the wall resumed his rounds.

 

* * * *

 

After the walls first went up, it soon became apparent that the unliving could not be left to their own devices. New York's Dead City collapsed almost as soon as it was up and running, as former Mafia Dons created pulse-deficient crime families on the inside, their living heirs supporting them from the outside.

The result was all out war, but a war unlike any other, in which none of the combatants could die. Edward Koch, who had been Mayor for only a few years, had dedicated himself to cleaning up the city and city-within-the-city. His campaign banners declared 'Respecting Americans, Pulse Or Not', which was a great tagline, but in practice was more challenging to uphold.

When the turf war deep in the NYDC threatened to take the walls down, he was told he had only one decision; burn it down and start again. The city was napalmed, every unliving who inhabited the walls had the flesh melted from their bones, the army entering shortly after to literally crush them all to dust.

“Dust don't start wars!” one general said to the news cameras, after the city was locked down.

Everyone decided he was an asshole, and should not be allowed to talk to the public ever again.

The result of NYDC's fall was the unanimous decision that someone with no agenda should keep the peace, someone with a pulse. A liaison between the living and unliving. And although volunteers were far and few between, there was a noticeable decrease in uprisings and incidents since the program had been initiated.

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