Season of the Dead
“Don’t go up there. Please, stay here with us,” the woman pleaded with her husband.
The man cupped her cheek in the palm
of his hand, wiped away a tear with his thumb before brushing her hair back
from her face.
“I have to. Our food is running low,
our water, we are almost out of candles. We can’t stay in this basement in the
dark. It’s okay, they’ve gone, we haven’t heard anything for hours.” They both
looked up at the ceiling, imagining the trashed house above, the creaking
floorboards they had listened to every day since they had locked themselves
away, the scratching at the door.
“What if they come back?” she
sniffed.
“They won’t get me. They are slow
and dumb, I will be long gone before they have a chance to catch me,” he
reassured her.
“Don’t go, Papa.” A small girl clung
to her father’s leg.
He scooped her into his arms and
kissed her cheek. “How about if I bring back some candy for my baby girl?”
“Candy!” the girl beamed. The man
smiled and kissed her again.
“Lock this door behind me, don’t
open it for any reason until you are sure it’s me,” he instructed his wife
before climbing the stairs to the door at the top of the basement.
“Please be careful,” she said
kissing him and quickly closing the door, not daring to even look out into the
house which was once their home.
“What’s in-feck-shun?” the little
girl asked when her mother came back down into the cramped basement. She sat in
a chair and took the girl onto her lap.
“It’s a sickness, Honey,” she
answered.
“Was Grandma sick when she tried to
eat Grandpa?” the little girl asked, her round eyes open wide.
“Yes, Baby, she was sick.” The woman
wiped away tears from her cheek with the back of her hand.
“And was Mikey in-feck-shun when he
tried to grab me?”
“Infected, Honey. Yes he was, he was
sick too.” The woman remembered grabbing her daughter from the path of the
neighbours twelve year old boy as he shuffled towards her, his mouth all red as
if he’d been eating berries. The bodies of his parents lying on the porch told
her he had not been feasting on strawberries.
“Is the whole world sick, Mama, even
the people on the TV?”
“No, Baby, there’s lots of people
like us, just waiting to be rescued. Why don’t you sleep now.” The woman began
to sing then and gently rock her child. “Hush little baby don’t say a word,
Papa’s gonna buy you a mocking bird…”
She started to doze herself but was
woken by a loud crash coming from upstairs. The girl woke with a start and her
mother put a hand over her mouth.
“Shhhh,”
“What is it, Mama, are the monsters
back?”
“They’re not monsters, Honey, just
people who are sick.” Although she said the words to her daughter she was not
so sure herself.
“I don’t want Papa to get me candy,”
the girl said, tears glistened in her eyes.
“Why not, Baby, don’t you like candy
anymore?”
“What if the sick people catch him
while he’s looking for candy? Then it’ll be all my fault, and he wont come
back.”
“Hey, hey, who’s the strongest man
in the whole world?”
“Papa.”
“He sure is, he can throw you up
like you don’t weigh nothin’, and you’ve gotten so big I can barely lift you.”
“And he can swing me over his
shoulder,” the girl grinned.
“Sure he can, aint no sick people as
strong as your daddy.” Girl and mother jumped when they heard a thud on the
door.
“Mama!” the girl screeched.
“Shhhhh, Baby, remember what we
said? quiet as a mouse.” The woman put a finger to her own lips and the girl
nodded.
Knock, knock.
“It’s Papa,” the girl whispered
excitedly.
The woman lifted the child and put
her on the seat while she crept up the stairs.
“And if that mocking bird don’t
sing, Papa’s gonna buy you a diamond ring,” the girl sung quietly, her legs
swinging back and forth.
“Is that you, Honey?” the woman
whispered at the door.
Knock, knock.
She could feel her heart quickening,
her breath catching in her throat. Was it him? What if he was injured and
needed help.
“And if that diamond ring turns
brass, Papa’s gonna buy you a looking glass.”
She eased the door open a crack and
looked out. Her husband had his back to the door, but it was him, she
recognised the red shirt he was wearing when he left. She exhaled a breath of
relief and flung open the door.
“And if that looking glass gets
broke, Papa’s gonna buy you a billy goat.”
The first thing the woman noticed as
her husband turned around was the smell. A sweet, sickly smell of putrefying
flesh. When she looked into his milk-white, dead eyes, she jumped back in
fright and tumbled head over heels down the stairs.
“Mama?” the girl jumped off the
chair as her mother crashed into the basement and lay still.
“No, Papa…. NOOOOO!!!!!!!”
Season of the Dead.
Don't look, Run!
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