Read Dead Hunger: The Flex Sheridan Chronicle Online

Authors: Eric A. Shelman

Tags: #zombie apocalypse

Dead Hunger: The Flex Sheridan Chronicle (38 page)

She nodded, and Gem smiled at me.

“So when I’m happy, mommy and Jesse are happy?  So if I’m happy all the time, so will they be?”

“I’m pretty sure it works just like that.  I know we’ll miss them, but I do have some picture albums here that we can look at when you want.  And remember the video, too.  Do you think that would make you sad, or do you think that would make you happy?”

Trina smiled.  “I’d be happy to see them on a video.”

Charlie said, “I tell you what, Trina.  We’re going to have a ceremony
this morning
where we
get to
say good bye to
your mommy
and
sister
.  We
’re all going to
take something that means a lot to us, put it in a hole in the ground, and we say a prayer over it, then cover it up.  And then we say a prayer for your mommy and sister, too.
  And you can bring wildflowers.”

“Beaker means a lot to me.  Can I bury him in the hole?”

We all looked at one another in shock.

“You knew he died?” Hemp asked.

“Yeah,” Trina said.  “I found him yesterday.  I figured it out.”

“He was sick, baby,” Charlie said.
 

He’s at peace now.  Sure you can bring him.  We’ll put him in a little box and you can decorate it if you like.”

“Okay,” she said.  “I’ll decorate it first,
then
we can put him in.  I think that’s better.”

Charlie laughed.  “Yes.  Makes much more sen
se.  I’ll get you some markers and
we’ll get the kitchen cleaned up while you prepare the box.”

 

*****

 

The ceremony was short and sweet.  We’d all been through enough.  Last night, Hemp and Charlie had wrapped Jamie’s body tightly in stretch wrap that’s normally used for palletized goods, making the cocoon airtight.  They then dug the hole, put her in the grave, and covered her with about two feet of dirt.  Two more feet remained to be filled, so as far as Trina knew, this was
just a symbolic
hole.

I had a
tee-
shirt from
a
Billy Vera and the Beaters concert that Jamie had given me, and I put that in the
grave
.  Gem had a tattered copy of Watership Down that she had left at my place before we split up, and was delighted to find it.  She knew it was the perfect tribute to her Rabbit
, so she kissed it and dropped it in as well
.

Hemp had picked up some Earl Grey tea at the store, and threw two teabags in – one for Jesse and one for Jamie.  His British contribution.

And following in my footsteps, Charlie tossed in her beloved
AC/DC concert tee shirt. 

And finally, in a gloriously decorated little cardboard box, Trina knelt down and dropped the box containing her lost pup Beaker into the hole. 

We stood back in silence,
and I closed my eyes.

“We honor the lives of Jamie and Jesse, the love they shared and the light they shined on this Earth.  As we stand here missing them in our hearts and souls, we also turn our faces to the heavens and know they’re looking down upon us with love and hope for the future.  God bless the two newest angels – our guardian angels – whose presence will give us comfort for the remainder of our lives.”

Tears streamed down the faces of each of us.  We all came together, arms around one another, and when our group embrace met its natural conclusion, Hemp
and I
picked up the
shovels and began filling in the hole.

When
the earth was mounded over the grave, Trina took the handful of tiny wildflowers she’d found and put them in the center of the grave.

She was
a brave, strong little girl, like her mommy and sister.  My heart ached for the loss we shared.

Then
we
all began walking
back to the house.

Gem and Charlie got there first, with Trina between them, swinging on their hands.  Hemp and I brought up the rear, our guns over our shoulders. 

The girls had entered the house already, but w
hen
Hemp and I
were twenty feet from the door, we heard
a sound from beyond the tree
line.

A
snapping,
crackling sound,
the sound of a tree branch rustling

Startled moans. 

Then again. 
And
again. 

The moans were constant
now
.

I looked toward the
forest, then back at Hemp, then checked my gun even as he checked his.  We both had additional magazines on us.

“You and me,” I said.  “Now.”

“You’ve got to warn them,” Hemp said.

He was right and I knew it.  I ran to the door and stuck my head in.  “Stay inside, get your weapons and wait for us.”

Gem looked at me, her face pale.  “Flex, what is –”

“No time,” I interrupted. “Be ready, but stay inside.”

I rejoined Hemp and we jogged toward the forest.

 

*****

 

As we ducked under the low-hanging branches, we scanned the line of traps.   The four we could see had
all snagged zombies.  Three males and one female
struggled against the snares, but to no avail.  Hemp ran toward the first one and fired a shot into the
thing’s
brain and
it
fell still.

I didn’t like going in, but we’d committed.  I ran to the second trap and as the
woman-creature
floundered there, snarling
, snapping,
and trying to scratch me with her
remaining fingernails
, I fired directly into her face, destroying it, and the brain behind it. 
That one
also fell motionless.

And then we heard rustling all around us.  I looked up to see twenty – no, at least thirty of them closing in.

We were surrounded.

Hemp ran to me, and we positioned ourselves back-to-back, our guns held up.

And we worked our way through magazine after magazine of ammo, knowing we would run out before they were all dead.

“The girls,” I said
, turning my head toward Hemp
.

“I know,” Hemp replied, in between shots.

“God help them,” I said.  “Please, let there be a God to help them.”

I fired my weapon with intensity, exploding the heads of the zombies approaching me and Hemp from all sides, and I felt his back against me reverberating as he did the same.

My eyes glanced at the sky, and for just a brief moment, I prayed that the guardian angels that were once my Jesse and Jamie – the ones we promised Trina were there – really existed, that they were really looking
down on us,
and
that they
were truly guarding us.

All of us.

 

A new chapter of our war with the
walking dead
had begun.

 

 

 

The End Of The Beginning

 

 

Stay Tuned For Dead Hunger: Book 2

Gem’s Chronicle

 

 

Other Books By Eric A. Shelman

And Dolphin Moon Publishing

 

 

Out of the Darkness: The Story of Mary
Ellen Wilson (1999)

 

The Mary Ellen Wilson Child Abuse Case
a
nd the Beginning of Children’s Rights in 19
th
Century
America
(2005)

 

A Reason
To Kill

(2010)

 

Dead Hunger

(2011)

 

Generation Evil

(2011)

 

“Like” Eric A. Shelman’s
Author
page on Face
b
ook!

(On Facebook, Search “Eric A. Shelman, Author”)

 

 

 

 

 

 

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