Horrific Shorts: Zombie Edition

Chapter 1269: Story 1269: On Foot, Through Hell



They left the broken tower before dawn.

The signal had died, but its echoes still buzzed in their minds. Names they didn't recognize. Screams without bodies. Places erased from every map. Juno walked ahead in silence, her boots sinking into cracked clay. Shade followed close, rifle low. H-13 limped behind, muttering diagnostics to himself.

There was no road. No markers. Only firelight on the horizon—and the stench of rot.

They had no more vehicles. No maps. No working gear. Just instincts, memory fragments, and whatever humanity hadn't burned away.

This was the final stretch.

And it was hell.

The land ahead—Sector Null—was a scorched, lawless zone, abandoned before the outbreak even began. Once a mining complex, now a pit of collapsed earth and perpetual flame. It had become a fire trench, fueled by leaking gas veins and buried biowaste.

But it was the only route left.

"Feels like the ground's breathing," Shade muttered as they descended into a gulch. "Or bleeding."

"It's both," H-13 confirmed. "Underneath us? Burn pits. Bio-reactive corpses, fused into the soil. Anything that dies here becomes fuel."

"Then don't die," Juno said flatly.

They moved fast, hopping between rocks, climbing past twisted fences and melted generators. Every few minutes, geysers of fire erupted from fissures—reminders that the land wanted them dead.

Then came the whispers.

At first, barely audible. Then stronger.

"Turn back… you're already gone…"

Shade froze. "Did you hear that?"

"Ignore it," Juno said. "This place mimics thought. It can't create—only steal what's inside you."

But the fire wasn't alone.

From the haze emerged figures.

Not undead.

Not fully alive.

Ashwalkers.

Creatures burned beyond identity—half-charred, still smoldering, yet moving. Their faces were waxen masks of memory, and they moaned in imitation of people they once were.

One limped forward, eyes flickering red.

It spoke in Juno's mother's voice.

"You left me in the dark, baby…"

She hesitated—just one second—and it lunged.

Shade blew its head off before it reached her.

"Don't listen to the dead," he growled. "Not here."

They kept moving, deeper into the pit, as the path narrowed to a funnel of flame. The heat blistered skin. The air turned metallic. Even H-13 began to stagger.

Then—

A gate.

Half-collapsed, rusted shut, but real.

Beyond it: a tunnel sloping up. Cool air. Real silence.

Juno slammed her shoulder into the gate.

Once.

Twice.

It creaked—then gave.

They collapsed inside, coughing, bleeding, but alive.

Shade kicked the gate shut behind them.

No flames. No whispers. Just the heavy weight of having survived the impossible.

Juno sat back against the tunnel wall and whispered, "Hell didn't win."

H-13 smiled faintly. "Not this time."

And far behind them, the fire moaned and shrank—unable to follow.


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