WARNING: Stories on this site may contain mature language and situations, and may be inappropriate for readers under the age of 18.
ZOMBIE MONKEY by Kellye Parish
posted July 12, 2010 under Short stories
“Look at that psychotic monkey.”
I glanced up from where I sat, sprawled across the top of a mossy flat boulder that was once a temple pillar, and looked in the direction Roy was turned. I moved with languid care; there was a viper coiled in a patch of warm Cambodian sunlight next to my steel-toed boot, and since I didn’t know what sort of snake he was, I thought it would be better not to offend him. There were things in the jungle much scarier than a basking snake, but a snakebite thousands of miles from MTV-watching civilization would be no picnic, either. (more…)
FOR CAROLYN by Dylan Charles
posted June 22, 2010 under Short stories
Alex Scott hiked up from the cabin through the snow, taking care not to get too far from the path. The snow got deep and got deep quick and if he wasn’t careful, he’d end up to his waist in snow.
It was stupid to leave the cabin in the first place. Erin and Carolyn would be up by tonight, tomorrow morning at the latest and he should be getting the place prepared. Couldn’t afford to get lost with the world bein’ the way it was. They all needed to stick together. (more…)
ZOMBIESTORY by James Kidd
posted June 14, 2010 under Short stories
They stood out on these streets. They looked more like kids cruising a suburban mall than the people who lived here.
Barry ducked into a store, “a bo-de-ga,” he over pronounced to Tommy and Mike, his eyes wide open for emphasis while flashing that Hollywood smile. The guys were not so enthralled with their new college roommate right now. “Here,” he passed a brown bag to Tommy.
“What is it?”
“A forty.”
“What?” (more…)
REVENGE by Nick Lloyd
posted June 4, 2010 under Short stories
Tags: Britain, Nick Lloyd
1
Steve Blum scowled in pure hate as he heard the cackle of the old woman. How he hated her. He hated her more than he hated the roaming dead. They had an excuse for what they did. They were dead and, if the scientists were to be believed, simply acting on instinct. She, however, did it because she was senile. The hag was a drain on their resources, and Steve had made this very clear many times. Not only did she take up room in the already crowded refuge but also she wasted their supply of food and water. Not to mention the time it took to look after her. As long as she was awake then someone had to be with her at all times.
He said a small prayer of thanks to whoever may be listening that it wasn’t him today. She seemed to be acting up more than usual. Making stupid noises and, no doubt, causing trouble for whoever was unlucky enough to have to keep an eye on her. (more…)
MEMORIEZ by Clay Dugger
posted May 28, 2010 under Short stories
Tags: Clay Dugger
Pain. Fear.
Crying.
A flash. A Memory.
—
Janie is seven. Santa just gave her her very first kitty. Mommy and Daddy said that she would have to learn how to feed it and clean its litterbox. She knows that those are stinky and yucky because her friend Annie has three cats, but they aren’t kittens. They are all grown up cats. Janie thinks she can get Daddy to clean the box, because he always does the yucky things instead of making Mommy or her do them. (more…)
AMONGST THE DEAD: DEPARTURE by David Bernstein
posted May 12, 2010 under Short stories
Tags: David Bernstein
The man patted his chest, “Kevlar vest.” He grinned. “Hurt like a bitch, but I’m alive.”
Riley held still, feeling foolish and angry. She should’ve made sure he was dead. Who would’ve figured he had a bullet proof vest on? She had made another blunder. Her mental notebook was becoming jammed with things to never do again. Maybe she was afraid that if the man she shot wasn’t dead she wouldn’t be able to finish him off. No, that was bullshit, she was assuming and careless. (more…)
FURTHER by Drew Fuller
posted April 22, 2010 under Short stories
Tags: Drew Fuller
Part 1.
I first met Neal shortly after my wife had died. I was holed-up in the attic of a boarding house in the middle of a safe zone just outside of Denver, recovering from a long illness that had beaten me down through most of the winter. I was thin as a waif, looking emaciated despite the repeated attempts of my aunt, who lived in a room below me, to try to keep some meat on my bones. I’d withered to a hundred and forty miserable pounds when spring finally came, my long fever broke, and we knew the long days and nights of maddening siege would come again. My old friend Allen, who had wintered in the room next door to my aunt, had told me stories of this crazy saint who drove the open roads through swarms of the dead. (more…)
HAPPY THOUGHTS by _cave
posted under Short stories
The old movies had it wrong. I couldn’t watch them, because they were so stupid. I can’t believe I came from those people, and I was almost glad that the last of the gas had gone south, the generators stopped, and movies were no longer a possibility.
In the movies, the apocalypse was like Never-Never Land. When the world goes to hell, you get to be a kid again. There aren’t any rules, there’s no one to tell you to stop that damned idiot thing that you’re doing, or ask you why you’re breaking that thing (or why you’re hurting that girl). You never have to grow up and do anything with yourself, because nothing that you do really matters anymore. You forget everything that came before, and you don’t really worry about what comes after. My ancestors had dreams of annihilation because they thought that it would be freedom. (more…)
WALK TO THE END OF THE STREET. HANG A LEFT… by Steve Ruth
posted under Short stories
Tags: unique zombies
The sound of chisel teeth grating against cinderblock filled the air. The noise made Masson and Jean’s skin crawl. Too bad it had nowhere to go…
Candlelight etched Jean’s forty-something face stark with fear. Her head looked like a boulder perched precariously on a mountaintop. She was six-foot-one and giving birth to three children put her weight at a solid two-twenty. “How long?” she asked. (more…)