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  • Current Wip in a list of wips

    So this is a potential art contest winner, if I can finish this week. My muse has been dragging lately and it’s been a struggle. Worse case, it will sit on my stack of ‘hope to sells’

  • Wip – First contest entry – got till Apr 30 to finish

    So I have to draw the Jeep then something to add, plus the company logo, which happens to be a round headed logo 🙂

    The other parts I’m still unsure about… a panda? Not sure

  • The Red Line

    The cold sat and ate upon Erik’s fingers like rabid dogs. Nibbling away at the nerves as quickly as they could as he stood outside the bus stop waiting for the five o’clock Red line. Erik had lost his gloves and his pockets were full of rocks. Rocks collected from his quarry, for the last few days. The rocks, a minor compulsory addiction for Erik when he couldn’t feed his other toxic addictions.
    The Red line bus was a two story monster on six wheels. The driver sat on the bottom right side behind a large front window. The doors, two of them, sat on the left side. One next to the driver and the other near the back. The driver slowed the monster. It growled and jerked and finally stopped with an angry burst of smoke from a metal pipe in the back.

    Erik shook his hands, willing the dogs from his fingers, picked up the duffel and stepped inside.

    The driver stopped him.

    “Blessed by the Omnipresent No’doer , you are,” the driver said. His chest and head human. His body was covered in black fur. His hands and feet large and clawed.

    “How have you not lost your fingers?”

    “There is still time,” Erik said as he placed the duffel on an empty seat and placed his bare hands under his coat.

    “The bus is a bit empty this morning Harry. Did you scare them all off with your ugly face and fierce temper.”

    “Ey, ridership has been falling off lately. This old Bear has nothing to do with it.”

    “The vampire population is growing again. It makes it hard to trust anything. I done no’ how you survive in these conditions. You need to settle somewhere.”

    “I haven’t…” Erik began. “I don’t… never-mind.”

    “How do you drive this thing being a taur and all.” Erik add.

    The bear/man laughed as he closed the bus door and put it into Drive. The Red Line bus growled and lurched forward.

    “Where u heading tonight?”

    “I’m off to get arrested,” Erik said.

    “You can get arrested trespassing, which you do often. Where are you headed?”

    The bus begins to slow, it jerks to a stop. Harry opens the bus doors and a pair of gaunt men step upon the bus from the back door.

    Erik knows what they are immediately and he begins to stand.

    “Sit down!” Harry growls. “No judgement on my bus, ever. Everyone is allowed a ride on this bus.”

    “I’m not riding a bus with them on board!”

    Erik shouts as he steps toward the front door.

    “They are the sole reason for the death of my family!”

    Erik glared at the pairs elongated, muscular jaws and bulges beneath the loose fitting clothing.

    “Why are they here Harry? They can fly. I thought you were smarter then this.”

    Harry stood over Erik, who was not a small human, but was smaller then the human-like bear.

    “Sit down Eric,” Harry said, exposing large teeth and a powerful human torso.

    “On my bus, you are my guest and will be treated as so, understood.” He adds then repeats the statement to the young vampire. The vampire nod and sit near the back door.

    “No one is leaving till they reach the destination. Erik, please finish this plan of you wanting to get arrested.”

    Erik sits down.

    “Where are they going?” Erik asks.

    “I don’t ask. They have passes.” Harry replied.

    Erik sat quiet for several moments as the Red Line bumped along roads that had not been maintained in 5 years. Traffic had all but stopped while the vampire-infected humans known as Resurrected prowled the streets.

    The North Eastern Territory didn’t used cars much anymore. The Red Line and other buses filled the need mostly.

    The bus hit a large patch of trash lying in the street and the bus lurched left then right tossing the passengers around like dominoes.

    “Fine… Harry. Fine, I’ll tell you. Stop hitting shit in the road.”

    Harry smiled, slowed the bus and it stopped with a jerk. Harry opened the doors. Outside the door, a half mile away was a large stone wall. Erik watched as the two vampires stepped down. Through the grim covered glass he could see them unfurl a pair of wings each and begin to fly. The headed to the wall.

    “For the gods sakes, tell me the plan,” the bear/man growled as his claws scraped the metal floor. If it wasn’t for you mother I wouldn’t care less but I promised I would take care ya. Spill it boy.”

    “I need to get into the Zoo Harry there is someone I got to find.”

    “The Zoo? Are u mental? You know what’s in their, right?”

  • Teraphobia- Within the walls of hell stood heroes.

    A Speaker is a traveling storyteller, an ancient tradition brought back by a tragedy. An event disguised as an infection. That infection spread toppled the crippled US government but under the hood of the infection was a revolution. This was a bloodless coup. An explosion of a new population of humans. The new population split into three types Taur, Vampire, and Magicians.

    Eric Carson is a Speaker, quite accomplished and quite old now. At seventy-plus years old he travels less but he has more stories than all the other Speakers. He lives in the Northeast Territory which contains the former States of New York, New Jersey, and West to Wisconsin.

    Speaking at the Fox theater in downtown Detroit, Eric removes a heavy coat and adjusts a stool. He begins his story with a smile.

    “So happy to be in this grand theater. Certainly, a privilege to be invited to tell my story here. You recall the Creature Revolution started with a pigeon, brought back to life, then an explosion of creatures that overwhelmed the world order.
    This change caused fifty years of anarchy, authoritarianism, and finally peace.

    Human ethics has always ebbed and flowed. We do what we want but unpredictable tragedy turns up the dial. We are not all 100% human anymore. Human on the inside, Taur on the outside, or vampire. Some of us are magic and that’s always unpredictable.
    Wars and battles drag on for years in an attempt to establish a dominant species. Can we all agree we are now in a good place? Mostly?
    I was an alcoholic. I was angry. Drinking was an excuse to be angry.

    At the time I lived under bridges. I had no money so I stole to survive and drink. Every time I went out I risked exposure and local enforcement. I sat in a drunken stupor, one night. Nothing like a baseball bat in the gut to sober a man up. After the guards bloodied me up, to sober me up, they claimed.

    There was no drunk tank back then. All the “undesirables” were sent to the zoo. I’m sure you all have heard of zoos. Large walled cities they dumped the undead, criminals, and drunks into.

    They caught me under a bridge a few miles West of Central Containment Facility. West was home but I had lost my wife and daughter so barely a home. I was captured, shackled, and transported to the Central Containment Facility, or zoo as I like to call it. Men dressed in black pulled me from the car and chained me to a wall outside the zoo. I stood with a large diverse group of humans, no other creatures.
    A machine gun would go off every few minutes. Scared the crap out of me. Drunken ears were always so jumpy.
    Regarding the zoo, we all knew what was inside. We knew the guards didn’t have to care what happened to us. Escape would only prompt cruel beatings outside the wall. Inside the wall, the Resurrected would dispatch us in painful, brutal ways. The once human monsters were once thought a moment of scientific miracles. Death is avoided and a new life is given, they said. The Resurrected were nothing but unbridled rage.

    The guards were happy to count down the time as we prisoners waited. Anxiety drowning us. All those years ago, the kindest words… “the automatic guns gave us 500 feet before they would overwhelm us.”

    Those zoo walls towered over us. The guards unchained us and pushed us through the opening gate. I was near the center of the group as we approached. A pair of infected slipped out from the gates. They attacked the first prisoner, tearing clothes and violently pulling his head to the side. A second prisoner turned and ran. He was quickly captured by the guards. The gate was closed. Multiple additional guards rushed forward. They stabbed the Resurrected multiple times, which did little to stop them. The super strong Resurrected threw several guards. Gun fire erupted and the Resurrected fell to the ground but were not still. They shook and struggled where they fell. They wanted to move but physically were unable. Around the mound of disabled Resurrected was blood and bodies. Three guards lie motionless, their bodies broken. Two additional prisoners were dead. The distraction prompted a few prisoners to flee but they were captured, beaten, and pushed to the front. The guards opened the gate a second time and pushed us through.

    The machine guns above the wall fired a final time. Several hundred feet away some Resurrected collapsed to the ground. The noise prompted the attention of a group from the right. They moved forward en masse toward us. The guards, the wonderful human beings they were, began to fire in front of the group. Attempting to lead them to the prisoners faster.

    The mob of Resurrected approached. The guards increased their taunting. Tried what they could to move the inevitable faster. The nearest infected begin to growl as the scent of life came closer. They listened to slight movements. Shuffling feet, panicked breathing, screams. A funny thing about the group of men and women I was imprisoned with, the men were the screamers. The scream erupted suddenly. It scared the crap out of me. It split the group immediately. Half the group ran in all directions. The other half froze or tried to get back through the gate. That gate wasn’t going to move.
    The runners sprinted through a tall field of grass toward a paved road nearby. The Resurrected stood in small groups, within the grass. They were motionless, sleeping. waiting to tear us to pieces. Several runners sprinted past and into the grass ahead. I’ve never been athletic. My running lasted maybe 50-100 feet. After, I tried to just avoid the groups of Resurrected. I found a path beaten into the grass when two runners collapsed beside me. They stumbled and disappeared into the tall grasses. After the fall, I stopped and listened. I wish I hadn’t because the sound was horrific.

    “There was something in the grass. I can hear it grunting.” I remember saying. I also pointed this out to one of the Baker brothers behind me but we were all kinda paralyzed. The thought of death waiting to take you without you seeing it. There were monsters waiting for us in the grass and they could be anywhere. We couldn’t just run through the field now… but there was this path.

    “Follow the path,” said a voice from behind. “The Resurrected are easier to see within the path. You want to go that way and do it now.

    The man had been through some horrific things. The left side was covered in scars and the right a mask.
    “We call them Crawlers,” he added as he pushed us gently to the path. “They have broken or missing legs. They crawl through the grasses. They are very slow.”
    “Pale, sickly things. You don’t want to run into them or see them.”

    I lead the group. The brothers behind me then the masked man. Behind him was a gaggle of others following farther away. I approached the location when a young man sprinted past me and through the grass. Behind him was a Resurrected, thin but strong human monster, running after. Gawd, I didn’t even know they could run. The only advantage we runners had was that the Resurrected were blind. Cancerous tumors blocked their sight. The masked man turned and swept the monster off his feet. The creature hit the ground hard and tumbled into a Crawler. I saw its pale limbs and stretched unnatural jaw. To my absolute shock, it was a disabled vampire.

    I turned back to the runner but he had disappeared. The masked man urged us to move forward. The mob of remaining prisoners fell in behind the four of us.
    We approached a curved glass building, atop the glass was a sculpted wooden red slab. A second slab covered a large neglected parking lot. Beneath the second slab was a city bus. The bus lay, its tires deflated, across the bus carport. The masked man pointed us toward the bus, specifically the closed folded door.

    To the right, two large centaurs milled within the lot. Their human forms leaned forward, barely able to stay atop their equine host. Behind us was the Resurrected. The barely-human monsters targeted the stragglers in the human mob.
    The attacks sent the mob into a panic and they pushed forward and past us.

    The masked man pointed toward the bus. I noticed this was a school bus. Its rear tires had been shredded and it sat against the front door of the bus station. The entrance to the bus was closed.

    Knowing the noise from the mob would attract everything in the area I ran as fast as I could to that door. I slapped the center of the folding bus door, hoping it would open but it did not. I continued to bang on the door as the others in the group searched for a different entrance. I looked to the masked man for guidance but he had suddenly become as panicked as the rest of us. He fumbled through his pocket till he pulled out a radio.

    “Tweety, open the door, now!” He shouted into the radio.
    “Ai, Scotty… I’m on my way,” was the eventual reply.

    Infected approach from the rear and the human forms on the Resurrected Taur woke. The large human-horse creatures pawed at the grass-covered concrete. Both centaurs bolted toward a runner, that has passed in a panic. They gained on the poor woman as she screamed. I watched as the monsters plowed into the woman and she stumbled into a building wall. I remember being unable to move. Unable to help the woman at all and really wanting a drink.
    “Remember, they can’t see us,” the masked guide named Scotty said to me. “If you are quiet, you should survive if they surround us.”

    I turned to repeat this to the brothers, they had stuck very close, but they had disappeared. I looked back toward the woman and I see them trying to figure out how to fight the centaur to save the woman. The two men had thick beards and a suicidal attitude, my opinion- of course.
    I looked back at Scotty and he signaled I hit the door again so I did, only harder. The door stayed shut. I heard him curse under his breath.

    “Tweety, get this damn door open,” he shouted only to regret it when several Resurrected rushed us and shoved us into large piles of trash surrounding the bus.

    That masked man bounced to his feet like a rubber band. He ducked and swerved, finally planting a foot-long blade into the Resurrected’s head.

    I was not so lucky to know a damn thing, let alone karate. I wrestled with the brute. Trying to deflect blows and possibly forcing the thing to hurt itself. It grabbed my throat and squeezed. I felt my breath disappear. I gasp for what was no longer there. Any plans I had were gone. I fought with the energy I rarely had but with the lack of strength, I had always had.

    My arms went numb and I stopped fighting. I stared up at my attacker. It was a young fifteen-year-old female child gifted with upgraded strength, upgraded anger, and pale, lifeless eyes.

    I watched as the young child, so focused on my fall and collapsed after Scotty stabbed his large knife through her head. Painful memories of my own daughter lost years prior, reappeared. The resignation… the darkness returned with a gasp of air.

    Scotty pulled me to my feet. My head spun and I stumbled into the open bus door. I recovered and looked to move forward.

    I heard them before I saw them. The swearing and the gruff cackling as the Baker brothers approached and stepped inside the bus.

    That was until we saw a little girl standing in the chaos. She stood pipe straight and silent as Resurrected passed by to attack panicking adults.

    “I understand why we are here,” Sean Baker said to me. “Why is she her?”

    The only thing I could think of at the time was the girl refused to leave her family.

    “She must have lost her family,” I said and began to push past the two large men.

    “You are in no condition to fight these Resurrected,” Sean shot back and he was right. I had not fought anyone but myself in several years. I demonstrated my skill just a few minutes prior.

    “…but this girl can’t die.” I protested. “We have to save her.”

    “Listen, man” Sean replied. “You ain’t saving anyone. Leave the saving to the Baker boys and Phantom of the Opera masked man out there.

    The Baker brothers, Sean followed by Andrew stepped from the bus, past Scotty, and into the mess of panic and monsters.

    They dodged and weaved through the crowd of Resurrected, careful to avoid many of the survivors who were increasingly unpredictable. Without their sight, the Resurrected relied on their hearing but with the mass of bodies and screams, I imagine it was hard for them to pinpoint anyone individually. They would attack en mass any loud noise, which prompted an idea. The rear of the bus was shoved inside the bus station and served as a door into the shelter. I ran from the door through the back of the bus and into the station.

    I ran to the far end of the station nearest the mob. There was a glass door, locked. I jerked the door closed in an attempt to make a noise. That only worked to catch the attention of the nearest Resurrected. It didn’t clear any from the survivors. I banged upon the glass of the station all along the side. I managed to distract a half dozen. I went back to the door. Three angry men slapped the door with their malnourished hands. They attempted to pull the door open but it was chained thoroughly. I screamed profanities as loudly as I could to try to draw more and it was moderately successful but I wasn’t thrilled with my attempts at heroism. I pulled a couple more but I watched as several more survivors fell and the young girl had disappeared from the silent island she had successfully created within the center of the mob.

    Andrew and Sean Baker continued to navigate through the crowd, attempting to find this young woman. They pointed to the remaining survivors that would listen to the bus door.

    I continued my mostly fruitless distraction to pull away 50-some angry, vengeful Resurrected and I continued to pull only the closest.

    A door opened behind me and a quartet of guards, dressed in the same armor as the ones outside the fence, rushed from the door. Within the hands of the lead, the guard was a crude cassette and radio. This radio played a symphony of screams as loud as I had ever heard. The guards rushed past me and shoved the radio into the crack in the doorway. The noise drew a least the crowd of Resurrected to the glass walls of the bus station. I admit in the end it wasn’t the greatest idea after they began to shake the entire building.

    I ran back to the bus, climbed inside, and to the bus door. Scotty, his mask gone and his face monstrously scarred stood at the door. A pair of women and a man sit on the seats of the bus. I recommended, with some choice words, that they move from the bus to the station and they obliged. I stepped out of the bus door to see the brothers, bleeding and bruised walking toward me with the young lady. Behind them the remaining two survivors. Five survivors and I stepped onto the bus and the driver closed the sliding door.

  • The Coyote – part 2 redo

    Mornings within the walled off, reclusive world are the worst part of an already fucked up life. The smell of decay mixed with body order, sprinkled with a constant moaning.

    The moaning was worse then the stench at times. A twisted symphony of pain expressed in guttural “Ohhhhs” all day and night.

    Tommy stared at the dangling plaster above his head. The room had seen better days but as was the world.

    Zombies milled under his window waiting like dogs hungry for breakfast

    “Tommy!” Shouted Mary , the station chief. “We have a breach! Get the hell down here.”

    Tommy leapt out of bed and dressed. He pulled a leather gun strap from the door. Placed two pistols within the holders, strapped the leather to his waist and chest. His bedroom was upstairs. The stairs lead to the kitchen.

    The kitchen was immaculate and cooking on the polished stove was a skillet filled with rice, onions, peas and carrots. On a counter to the left was a dozen beautifully polished red candied apples.

    “Tommy, I need a hand!” A woman pleaded. Tommy stared at candied apples wishing to take a big bite.

    “I’m coming… I will be there in two shakes.”

    Tommy pushed open the kitchen door to the restaurant. A large counter stretched from left to right, on the counter sat a neatly placed set of napkin containers and utensils.

    In front of the counter was a row of tables, chairs and a middle-aged woman attempting to hold back a mob of zombies with a large sheet of plate glass that had been pushed in.

    “We can’t lose this station.” He looked up to see the entire window had slipped from the frame. The glass was holding but the size of the sheet made it almost impossible to prevent the invasion of the madness. Men, woman, and other creatures once thought to be fantasy, stricken with a rage against the living.

    “Oh my god, how did this happen?” Tommy asked as he attempted to help her push the mob back.

    “They got lucky. They always get lucky,” the woman said as she grabbed a tall bar chair from beside the counter and wedged it between the counter and the glass.

    “Mary, we can get through this,” Tommy encouraged.

    “Fuck off, with your patronage and false encouragement,” Mary shot back with a growl.

    Tommy laughed. He pulled a knife from a scabbard, on the gun strap near his shoulder, and began to thrust the knife into the temple of as many angry zombies as he could.

    The punctured zombie stopped fighting and fell limp, which wasn’t helpful because they prevented Mary from closing the window.

    Tommy began to pull the twice dead zombie from the window. He stabbed a few then repeated the process. The floor was littered with bodies. Tommy and Mary managed to pull the glass into the diner. They wedged the glass flat against the small slices of lumber keeping it from falling into the parking lot.

    A parking lot filling with undead due to the noise and activity.

    “We have to get this sealed up,” Tommy said as he held the window forward. He watched as the glass bounced in and out with the slapping of vicious hands against the window.

    “I will grab the extra pieces the Network sent. That should work perfectly.

    “Is that why we pay dues? So the Network can send us pieces of wood to help us seal up crappy stations. I’m so tired of this life, Mary.” Tommy complained. “I just want to live without the obligations.”

    Mary disappeared for a moment then returned with a selection of wooden pieces. They both installed a frame around the bottom and sides of the window to prevent the barrage of meaty punches from pushing the window back in.

    “Listen,” Mary said as she began to reset the tables and chairs.

    “Your 23 years old, born within Station 14…”

    “Station 13.” Tommy corrected but Mary returned a stern look.

    “14…” she replied then added. “You were not born outside this zoo. You know nothing of crap. Try having freedom then being in-prisoned and in fear of your life the rest of it. I long for what I had 25 years ago every day.”

    “You know nothing of freedom.”

  • Coyote- Tommy

    “No! I said don’t do that. What the hell!” 
    Tommy stepped toward the woman as she attempted to sprint between two pair of outstretched arms. The eager arms trying to find lunch, which was the source of the screaming. Tommy winched as the zombie on the left grasp her ponytail. The woman’s face, joyful she had made it past them, would soon change to horror if Tommy couldn’t help her but he had his own problems. The woman’s screams had attracted a mob of zombies but worse, other prisoners had made the zombies ravenous.

    The zombie we’re blind, their eyes covered in a cancerous white film but they felt everything. Tommy had developed a particular set of skills, allowing him to avoid the sun bleached, hungry grasped but he also avoided stupid moves like running between two zombies expected a miracle. 
    “Miracles didn’t exist”, Tommy thought as he watched the woman fall backward landing on her ass first, then her back. 
    “Miracles were part of that Christian revolution that disappeared once the world changed.” He continued the thought as he crouched low and walked forward, careful to avoid any noise. 

    “Some of the Coyotes take a stabbing approach…,” he silently explained to himself, running through a speech he planned to give at the Rail Station downtown
    later in the day. 
    “… but I prefer the silent, stalking, carefully planned approach. Avoiding conflict, wasted energy and potential surprises. It’s a far smarter approach.” His thought concluded. 
    He grabbed the woman by the ankles and pulled. The zombie holding her hair grasp tighter as he as his partner began to bend down. 
    “Her screaming doesn’t help.” Tommy said to himself as hope of rescuing this group of prisoners disappeared along with the credits he would receive from the families.

    “Five thousand credits per, multiplied by ten, now three… possibly two if I can’t rescue this dumb screaming woman. Hold it together Tommy. You can only do so much.”

    Tommy lifted the woman by both ankles and violently pulled her toward him. She slammed her head on the concrete beneath her but the zombie holding her hair lost his hold. Tommy pulled again, careful to be as stealthy as he could. Other zombie stood waiting, listening groping for a clue. 
    The woman lie under him. “Shut up!” He said looking into her terrified eyes. The look, familiar always haunting. “Your going to kill us both. Stop screaming.”

    The woman stopped screaming, for the moment, and Tommy helped her to her feet. 
    “We are 200 yards from Station 1,” Tommy said. “You can do this.” He encouraged her as he pulled a large gauze pad from his bag to stop the bleeding beneath her blond ponytail. He held it to her head for several moment as the two zombie approached from behind. 
    The two other survivors, that had listened, stood like statues. Every bone and muscle in their body shook but they stood silently waiting. 
    “Let’s go, quietly,” Tommy instructed. 
    The four, two woman and two men walked slowly toward Station 1, a run-down restaurant with a large plate glass window in the front

    Tommy placed the screaming woman’s hand on the gauze bandage and encouraged her to move forward quietly. She seemed to want to comply this time.

    The two zombie behind them, encouraged by the interaction with the woman, approached. Their hunger insatiable. Tommy, was aware and searched for anything to lay in the pairs path. 
    A shopping cart, covered in weeds, would work. Tommy suggested the group continue forward carefully and quietly as he veered off the the left to get the shopping cart. 
    He freed the cart, in moments. Picked up the cart so it would not make noise and turned. 
    All three survivors had began running toward the restaurant. 
    Tommy cursed like he had never before. “The ignorance of these people,” he thought as he watched one of the men fall and get brutally beaten up, then eaten. The women ran erratically around the zombies that approached. Skillfully, avoiding the hungry lunges of the predators. 
    “The zombie, though would overwhelm them,” Tommy thought. He knew it would happen, because it always did.

    The numbers around the women grew till the commotion had drawn all the zombie from around where Tommy stood. He stood alone, behind a shopping cart, watching the entire scene. The tragedy of the inability to listen and check the fear for sake of survival. Tommy was void of fear anymore, reborn to this brutal new world of terror. He walked pass the growing mob of zombie and headed toward the back of Station 1. He approached the back door, withdrew a key and unlocked the door. He opened the door and disappeared.

    Coyote Part 2

  • The Zoo part 3

    Tommy turned. Excited to see his old friend. Wishing he would visit more, Sean had passed years ago. He was never going to visit and no one was standing near the bar.

    “Damn it, ghosts hovering everywhere in this hell-hole. Sure there is plenty of reason to haunt but leave me the hell alone. I don’t need any false hope. I don’t need any false anything.”

    He noticed the bottle of whiskey sitting on the counter, stood and poured a shot of the liquor into his glass. He placed the glass back on the counter and tightened the top.

    A door opened and closed. Tommy heard Mary talking to someone. Soon the conversation began to moved toward the front. The voices familiar.

    “ Better not be another damn ghost,” Tommy shouted.

    “ I ain’t no ghost brother,” came the reply. Tommy smiled when he saw Julian saunter through the door.

    “Your brother will not leave me alone,” Tommy said.

    “You killed his ass, dummy what else is he going to do,” Julian said, with a laugh. His laugh was short and he swallowed the last part.

    “I’m sorry, Julian.”

    “Stop apologizing stupid. You did what you had too. I brought help.” Julian adds.

    He points toward the swinging restaurant doors leading to the kitchen. Standing in the doorway is a towering figure. The figure ducked under the door frame. The light from the restaurant sank into its dark, gaunt face revealing vile elongated teeth and thin pencil like lips…

    Tommy immediately drew his pistol. Julian countered by pulling his own short double-barrel shotgun.

    “No, Tommy! He is not a threat.”

    “Not a threat, christ. Julian, this creature killed your brother.”

    “This creature did not. Put the gun down.” Tommy picked up the tension in Julian’s voice. His own guilt magnifying the image of shooting an innocent man.

  • The Coyote part 3 – wip

    “So what do you think, Tommy?” Mary said.

    “Hmm… sounds fun,” Tommy began. “…but really… what do we know.”

    “Well,” Mary began as she poured Tommy a glass of whiskey. “As you already said to Mr. Carson, he is part of the Carson…

    “What do we know of the New World Group?” Tommy asked he downed the shot of whiskey and placed the glass next to the bottle.

    Mary opens a laptop covered in stickers. She searches then says, “per the Network search, looks like New World Group runs several financial companies for a large part of the new Commonwealth. They are based in the New York territory.”

    “Of course the New York territory most big companies still work out of the remains of New York City. What does the Network know of this Petty?”

    “Well, without the ability to communicate through the internet anymore I will have to ask and wait for that to come back.”

    “Charlie?”

    “Charlie,” Mary repeated then paused. “I can dig up information on Charlie. Sounds like he is inside. The Network will be able to find something. Give me an hour. Do you need the usual crew for this job?”

    Mary smiled.

    “Yes, Mary. You are a superstar. Can I get a refill?” He asked holding the empty glass of whiskey.

    “No,” Mary shot back. Her smile disappeared. “I should not of given you a glass of it. Severe lack of judgment on my part.”

    Tommy frowned but didn’t protest. “Thank you Mary you’re still a star.” He finished his meal and turned toward the large plate-glass windows within the front of the restaurant. Mary disappeared into the kitchen.

    Outside, decrepit sky-scrapers crept into view to his left. Out front and a half mile away was the city wall protecting the residents of the mid-western territory of Gregory. Between the wall and Tommy was a flat plot of tall grass and trees that struck him as odd because of its proximity to the tall office buildings. Tommy took a seat near the front window. A leathery hand scratched at the bottom of the window and caught Tommy’s attention for a moment. The owner of the hand had found itself in front of the window years ago but was too malnourished to be of any threat. Most of the zombie had suffered the same fate. Disabled and doing a better job as plant food then a threat to humans.

    They were not harmless. They have killed a fair amount of human prey. Mostly the new prisoners the do not know where to go. The zombie can still pack a punch. Even in their weakened state.

    “I should find the 9-iron some day,” he says out loud. The thought appearing suddenly.

    “You can’t hit worth shit, Tommy,” says a familiar voice coming from the back of the restaurant.

    “Sean!” Tommy replied with a smile. “Been waiting”

  • The Coyote – part 2

    Mornings within the walled off, reclusive world are the worst part of an already fucked up life. The smell of decay mixed with body order, sprinkled with a constant moaning.

    The moaning was worse then the stench at times. A twisted symphony of pain expressed in guttural “Ohhhhs” all day and night.

    Tommy stared at the dangling plaster above his head. The room had seen better days but as was the world.

    Zombies milled under his window waiting like dogs hungry for breakfast

    “Tommy!” Shouted Mary , the station chief.

    “You have a phone call.”

    Tommy dressed, grabbed his weapons and walked down the neglected wooden steps to the small cafe on the ground floor.

    At the bottom of the stairs was a kitchen. The kitchen was immaculate and cooking on the polished stove was a skillet filled with rice, onions, peas and carrots. On a counter to the left was a dozen beautifully polished red candied apples.

    Tommy fingered one of the apples and listened to Mary on the phone.

    “I understand, Mr. Carter.”

    “Tommy O’Neil is the coyote, yes sir.“

    “He’s on the way, sir.”

    “Listen, Mr. Carter. We give you our word. We will find your daughter.”

    “Don’t do that,” Tommy said as stepped into the cafe lobby. In front of him sat a large plate glass window. Mary sat at a small table. A phone sat in the center.

    “Don’t promise anyone anything. I am no superhero.” Mary, a thin woman, eyes that understood the horrors of the world, placed the phone receiver in Tommy’s hand.

    “Mr. Carter,” Tommy O’Neal began. He sat the phone on his shoulder and slicked back his hair.

    “There are no guarantees in this zoo.” He said. “I lost 8 people just yesterday because they wouldn’t listen. “ This daughter is what 22, 25 and a criminal?”

    “14, not possible,” Tommy snapped. “They would not push a 14 year old into this shithole.”

    “Snuck in! That is ridiculous. No one would sneak into this place. Are you calling from a radio show, your joking right.”

    “Your daughter is dead,” Tommy said. “Yes, it’s true. Your daughter has a 15 minutes time-to-live and that has passed.”

    “Your apparent sphere of influence has no bearing. The Maxwell-Carter family may have some pull outside the Zoo, but within these walls we make the rules.”

    “The Network can be a very powerful enemy, Mr. Carter. I’m just saying, be careful what you wish for… but honestly how much and why should I care?”

    Tommy gently tapped the glass on the whiskey bottle. Mary did her best to ignore him and pretended to work nearby.

    “I’ll get it myself,” he whispered and she countered by shaking her head no.”

    “500,000 credits?” Tommy said with disgust. “What am I going to do with credits. Toss them at the undead?”

    His words trailed off as he noticed an odd zombified creature approach the large restaurant window. He pointed with his free hand.

    Mary whispered, “I believe those are called satyrs. Half human, half goat.”

    “Looks like a demon,” Tommy replied while covering the receiver.

    The satyr had a horn twisting from the left side of his head and a second horn, broken protruding from the right side.

    It’s fur showed up in patches over its pale, dead human face. Open wounds tracing exposed compound fractures.

    “When did they start putting the Freaks in here?” Tommy said as he swept up the bottle of whiskey and poured a second shot.

    Tommy swallowed and Mary took the bottle from him. “Your not finishing this bottle,” she said.

    “I am listening to you Mr. Carter. You would like me to rescue your daughter and your daughter just happened to slip into a prison full of zombies… and other monsters… with a stone that has the power to create or take away life. So this is a mission to save the world. Did I get that right?”

    “Fuck off, with your goddamn super hero mission. I ain’t no super hero. Do it yourself then.”

    “I want something else. I want you to have me released. I want out of this shit hole.”

    “How did she get the stone.” Tommy asked. “A family of thieves, I see. That certainly makes this job more interesting and more valuable. The Stones haven’t been free from the Maxwell-Carter family for four years.”

    He paused, “Mr. Carter this must be embarrassing for you. You seem that type.”

    “No one outside the prison will not do shit for 50,000 credits,” he said, replying to Mr. Carson. “I doubt they would step into this zoo for 100,000 and they are definitely not looking for your daughter in West Ransom. They may take your money though.”

    The smell of candied apples drift into his nose.

    “Mary, can I get a plate of your awesome fried rice and a candied apple. I love those candied apples.” Tommy said waiting for a response.

    “Sure thing, I got you. Anything else?” Mary said.

    A glass of water, please.” Mary disappeared into the kitchen of the diner.

    “Are you changing your offer for this job, Mr Carson. You have no other options.”

    “500,000 credits, guaranteed by the Carter family and Northeast territory… Nice. Where do you believe they were heading.

    “That’s a three station hop and some of the most populated areas of the city. Still very likely she is already dead but I promise I will do my best.

    “How will you guarantee I get paid? I am on the inside of this hell on earth zoo. The Blackguards are corrupt as hell and I can’t get out.”

    “The Garden. Sure. The Network’s central station. I’ll meet you at the top.

    Tommy placed the phone on the receiver. “Looks like we have another suicide job, Mary. Can you call…”

    “They are on the way, already. Held up at station 11. Will be here in an hour.”

    “You are my favorite station chief, Mary and I love your apples. Gawd.” He said as he bit onto the candied dessert.”

  • Super human

    There is that moment, you play over and over in your head. That event that changes your life forever. Here’s the funny thing about that moment…

    It’s not the real moment, it’s a memory that has been edited to make the audience (me) stare in awe and contemplate. Like all great memories, this one takes some liberties with what you remember and what really happened.

    Mid-year in 1997 I came home from the military to try to return to ‘normal’ society. I started a job at a grocery store – grabbed what I could and who would hire me.

    The first day, sitting in a room in the back with a group of maybe six other new employees. I look to see if I could possibly be friends with any of the people in the group but it’s all business and I’ve never been too good at reaching out.

    Second-third-maybe a week later, it’s not clear:
    I’m working in furniture monitoring the floor to ensure none of the furniture moves away like it could but she showed up. This super gregarious young woman in a purple outfit. She walked past me giggling and talking with her new friends. My first thoughts were, “Wow, there is something about her. People seem to revolve around her. There is an attraction that emanates from her and I need to figure out what this strange attraction is…”

    “It’s not love,” I think. “She just seems to be magnetic to everyone. There is this light/aura that radiates from her.”

    I drummed up the courage to talk to this woman, which honestly wasn’t as hard as I expected but 20:20 it makes sense. We got along well and I enjoyed being around her. We were not officially friends till this dork attempted to read a book while also listening to her talking to some friends. I was discovered and surprisingly invited to her table. The conversation was immediately wonderful till a dreaded ‘incident’ happened.

    She sneezed in my ear, leaving the side of my face wet and the entire table in stitches. It wouldn’t be the only time and I wouldn’t be the only victim.. but another time.

    As with most things involving her, this small paragraph has evolved into an adventure but I have little time to explain the progression in detail so I will skip ahead.

    This light/aura/supernatural event poured out of her attracting everyone around her. It was like a superhero moment where the villain started pulling in the whole world leaving the hero on the outside trying to figure out how to stop it… but I didn’t want to stop it. I wanted to figure out more about this woman. How was she doing this? It made no sense so I talked to her every chance I got and I began to notice this glow in her eyes when she talked to me. The gregarious women, who everyone loved, would change slightly when I appeared.
    So her power changed/evolved when I was around. Like a responsible superhero I, of course, had to figure out what was going on.

    I never figured it out, 20+ years and I’m still trying to figure out why @Sabrina Stitt is so super-powered. There is something about her that is super-human. Happy Valentine’s day.