WARNING: Stories on this site may contain mature language and situations, and may be inappropriate for readers under the age of 18.
EVERYBODY BUT LAZARUS – MACHINEHEAD by Kellye Parish
March 14, 2011 Short stories Tags: Kellye Parish
Sequel to EVERYBODY BUT LAZARUS – LIVING DEAD GIRL
Dr. Rob Klein looked through the glass at the girl in the hospital bed on the other side. A patch of gauze the size of his palm was taped across her right eye and her limbs were strapped to the bedframe. An oxygen mask across her face obscured her expression, but her one heavy-lidded eye stared straight back at him.
“How is she?†(more…)
THE LIGHTHOUSE by Chris Daruns
March 12, 2011 Longer stories
The tourists had left by then, leaving Charlie Copper to finish his day’s chores in peace. They were summer people mostly and, apart from a few die-hard fanatics, were harmless in their visits to the oldest lighthouse in Connecticut’s history. Mary, the gift shop girl, and Ted, the tour guide and resident aficionado on all things lighthouse had gone home an hour before, leaving Charlie to close up shop on his own.
In less than two hours, four people would be dead in Charlie’s living room. (more…)
LOST AND FOUND by Barrett Shumaker
February 26, 2011 Short stories Tags: Barrett Shumaker, contest winner
The old man was dead.
The dog lay beside the old man on the truck’s threadbare bench seat. The shiny thing lay in the man’s lap, still clutched in his hand. The dog had seen the shiny thing only once before. He knew it made a loud noise and scared away strange people, but he didn’t know it would hurt people. He didn’t know it could make them dead. (more…)
CAKEWALK, PART 2 by Clitoris Rex
February 2, 2011 Short stories Tags: Clitoris Rex
The fire stirred up in each one of us comes screaming out in huge angry strides. The seam of the undead stretches out in front of us, and a sight that usually spells death and retreat seems like a smiling challenge begging for our boot heels. I clutch my crowbar tightly, each end sharpened and scarred, a part of me since the sun went down and never came back up. In front of me, white headstones spread out in rows, identical in shape but not in content. Thousands, all the way to a horizon flecked with the hulls of planes, great crushed airliners that failed to save us from the realization that each destination was more tainted than the last. A jeep carrying The General screams past, guns blazing precious high caliber promises. His megaphone screams, “THIS LIFE! A FUCKING CAKEWALK. MAKE THEM PAY!” (more…)
UNTITLED PART 5 by Clitoris Rex
January 26, 2011 Short stories Tags: Clitoris Rex
Sequel to UNTITLED PART 4
I liked the neighborhood because you could hear crickets. Some people, it bugs them, but I liked following their rhythms. When they came out it was time to go quiet, to calm down and let them do the talking.
The lamp stayed pretty close to me when I read. I liked the heat from the bulb. Me smirking with the thought of being part moth, her weight resting silently on my lap. She looked up. “Hey why don’t I feed her and put her down, you can keep reading,” she said, lamp glow reflecting from her eyes. (more…)
THE EXTINCTION PARADE by Max Brooks
January 19, 2011 Announcements
Max Brooks (author of World War Z and The Zombie Survival Guide) has just published a new short story online at The Daily Beast. Read The Extinction Parade.
CAKEWALK, PART 1 by Clitoris Rex
January 16, 2011 Short stories Tags: Clitoris Rex
There is a point on the horizon. Take that point and split it in two. Split it again, and again, and again until you reach a space, one that cannot be split. Within that space you’ll find the most immense horror you can imagine. Oceans of pain, not just the type of pain that your flesh so poorly translates, but the actual essence of it.
A thing. (more…)
CONSEQUENCES by Nick Lloyd
January 12, 2011 Short stories Tags: 'Transmission' series, Britain, military, Nick Lloyd
Sequel to SALVATION
Jeff Robinson sat in the chair and waited for his inevitable death. In fact he wasn’t as much sat in the chair, as strapped in. Think leather fastenings were secured tightly round his ankles, thighs, wrists, arms and waist. He looked around the empty room, moving only his eyes as his head was held firmly in place by the metal cap tightly fixed to it. It reminded him of a room where prisoners on TV shows were taken just before receiving several thousand volts in the electric chair. The irony wasn’t lost on him. (more…)
DEADLY CONNECTIONS by William Robinson
January 5, 2011 Short stories Tags: Britain, William Robinson
Sequel to DEADLY COMMUTE
Daniel lay dead to the world. It felt like the best rest he had had in ages as he slowly opened his eyes and thought it about time he rose. The fact that his head was lying on a tiled surface did not alert him, nor what seemed like the distant screams of people locked in hand to hand fighting, it was the sight of a middle aged business woman, on her knees, trying to pull the heels from her stilettos out of some huge guys ears as he lay on the ground. At this he awoke with a jump and everything came flooding back to him; the fighting outside the train, the driver getting bit and then her head being cut off as she tried to attack them and then him leading a group of commuters against a bunch of zombies so they could escape the platform. (more…)
FIRST RACE by Quartermaster
December 21, 2010 Short stories
Even using heavy equipment, explosives, and fire, it had taken the whole winter to set up the race course. Every time the weather warmed up above freezing, we had to stop and retreat to our holes. Fortunately, this was one of the coldest winters in thirty years, which gave us almost 100 days to work from dawn to dusk, from mid-November to the last cold days of March. Deepening or digging the pits was the hardest, most grueling work of all although getting the track walls high enough was a close second. However, we expected it was all going to be worth it when the flag came down, the engines revved up, and our fans literally clawed their way onto the course. Doing this kind of construction and prep work close to a major city these days seemed to just be asking for trouble but the Chief was adamant. He told us again and again that putting the course out in the boondocks wouldn’t give us the huge crowds that would make this event profitable enough to justify our efforts. (more…)
NEVER BEEN TO DALLAS, PART II by Laurence Munnikhuysen
November 26, 2010 Short stories Tags: Laurence Munnikhuysen
“The bearer of evil tidings,
When he was halfway there,
Remembered that evil tidings
Were a dangerous thing to bear.â€
Robert Frost
Derelix Jersey
“Shoot them in the temple. Aim for the temple and they will go down.†This is what the radio said, some time ago, and all the other rubbish that spills from those speakers is worthless. Maintain faith, faith in one’s self, but this is difficult to do. (more…)