Zahra turned and saw that her brother was struggling with the climb. He looked exhausted, and rightfully so. He’d been out in the desert heat longer than the rest of them. Zahra slowed and allowed Rabia to move ahead of her. When she was within reach, she held out her hand. Baahir didn’t verbally respond to the gesture. He simply took her hand and kept going. Zahra pulled him along the best she could. The companionship seemed to give Baahir the energy he was missing, and he picked up his pace, slightly.
Rabia made it to the peak of the bridge first and stopped. Zahra wouldn’t have stopped, but she understood why a few seconds later. The left side of the bridge was missing, cutting the width in half. Zahra knew what it meant. They’d be more exposed to the searing heat, while also having to trust the integrity of the already faulty construction.
“Um, my friends…” Ali said from behind.
“What?” Zahra asked, squeezing her eyes closed. They needed a break from the heat and fumes.
“I fear that Baahir may have been… correct.”
Everyone spun around, and Zahra’s eyes opened again — then widened — as they saw dozens of shadows moving below.
And they looked human.
There had been no evidence of anything
Rabia pointed to the crossroads. “Look…”
And there, from within the smoky gloom, stepped a single person.
Zahra swallowed.
And then another, and another. More and more people filled her vision.
The people — if they could still be called that — were all in varying stages of decomposition and decay. A few were missing limbs and chunks of flesh altogether. They were mostly nude, with skin that was dry and leathery, and each of them was caked in dust.
And blood. Centuries-old blood.
“Are they—”
Zahra sighed, finishing her brother’s thought. “Zombies… they’re
“I think we should run away,” Ali said, turning back to the broken section of the bridge. “
Baahir backed away. “I second that.”
Zahra leveled her pistol at the nearest ‘
“Go.”
All four of them bolted into action, running over the bridge, paying the heat and the broken section no attention. They cleared the ruined section in no time, and allowed the decline to aid in their escape.
Suddenly, the group stopped, and Zahra nearly plowed through them all. The collision was a hefty one, and Ali was knocked to the ground. Rabia and Baahir picked him up.
Not that Zahra noticed. Her eyes were glued on the shadows moving about before them.
“Shit…” she hissed.
The others froze in place and watched as dozens more of the decrepit army came into view. They began pouring out of buildings — not unlike the way the scorpions had seemed to multiply and press forward constantly — and appeared out of the obscure haze of the city streets.
“How is this
“It… it’s not,” Zahra replied.
“It doesn’t matter,” Rabia said, reequipping her rifle. She shouldered it, gazed down the scope, and pulled the trigger.
The closest of the bunch lost his head. The skull exploded in a puff of goop and dust — not at all what Zahra expected to see.
“What the…”
“What is
She fingered the trigger but didn’t pull it. Rabia’s description stopped her in place.
It was the same description Zahra would have used, but it could not possibly be accurate.
“I see…
“Worms?” Ali asked, looking sick to his stomach. Even in the firelight and caked in dust, Ali’s skin visibly changed color.
Rabia lowered her weapon and eyed Zahra. “Yes, worms.”
Zahra nodded. “And a
Oddly, it was Baahir who stepped forward. Zahra could see that he was deep in thought. Zahra knew the look. She wore it often.
“What is it, Baahir?”
“The hellstone… it’s the cause of the plague that Khaliq is trying to recreate, right?”
No one said a word. They all agreed with the statement. It’s why they were here, after all.
“What’s your point?” Rabia asked.
Zahra spoke up. “Our father had a colleague of his test the hellstone many years ago, and he discovered that it carried a species of microscopic organism. The stone itself is nothing more than igneous rock. It’s what’s
“Interesting?” Ali retorted. “It could be the end of the world, Zahra. Those…