Horrific Shorts: Zombie Edition-Chapter 2001: Story : Ashes Don’t Stay Dead (Series HS:ZE 21)

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Chapter 2001: Story 2001: Ashes Don’t Stay Dead (Series HS:ZE 21)

The ground breathed beneath them.

Cracks split the earth like open wounds, glowing red with slow-moving lava. Each step sent dust rising into the air—ash mixed with the stench of rot and old fire. This land had died once. Now it refused to stay dead.

The man stopped first.

Broad-shouldered, scar-lined, twin swords crossed on his back like silent vows. His jaw tightened as his dark eyes scanned the horizon. Shapes moved in the haze—too many, too slow, too hungry.

“They’re waking up,” he said.

The woman beside him didn’t flinch.

Leather armor hugged her frame, scarred but intact. A handgun rested loose in her grip, finger calm, ready. Her eyes—sharp, fearless—followed the distant silhouettes clawing their way out of the dust.

“Good,” she replied. “Means they’re still stupid.”

A low growl rolled across the cracked plain. 𝐟𝗿𝐞𝚎𝚠𝐞𝚋𝕟𝐨𝚟𝐞𝕝.𝕔𝕠𝚖

From the smoke behind them, something massive shifted. Clawed hands—wrong, twisted, almost demonic—pushed through swirling shadows. Not a zombie. Worse. The old things that ruled the dark after the world fell.

The man stepped in front of her without thinking.

Always the same instinct.

Always her life first.

A memory flashed—fire raining from the sky, cities screaming, the dead rising faster than the living could run. He had lost everything that night. Everything except her.

“Count them,” he muttered.

She did. “At least forty. More coming.”

The first zombie stumbled forward, skin hanging like torn cloth, eyes glowing dull and hungry. Then another. Then dozens. A horde forming—slow, relentless, endless.

The ground trembled.

The man drew his swords in one smooth motion. Steel whispered through the air, catching the sepia light like fire made solid.

“Same plan,” he said.

She smirked. “There’s always the same plan.”

She fired.

The handgun barked, sharp and final. A zombie’s head snapped back, collapsing into the dust. Another shot. Another fall. But for every corpse that dropped, two more crawled forward.

The man charged.

His blades moved like fury given form—cutting, tearing, ending. Blood sprayed hot against the cold ash. He fought close, brutal, refusing to give ground.

Behind him, she covered his blind spots, shots precise, measured. Not fear. Never fear. Only control.

The monstrous hands lunged.

Too fast.

One claw raked across the man’s arm, tearing leather and flesh. He grunted but didn’t stop. Pain was familiar. Pain meant he was still alive.

She screamed his name—not fear, but command.

He rolled aside as she emptied the magazine into the creature’s face. It shrieked, a sound like stone breaking, and vanished back into the smoke.

Silence fell slowly.

Bodies littered the cracked earth. Smoke curled around them like watching spirits.

The man leaned on one sword, breathing hard.

“You bleeding,” she said.

He looked down, then back at her. “Not bad.”

She stepped closer, resting her forehead against his chest for just a second—just long enough.

Then she reloaded.

“This was only the edge,” she said.

He nodded, eyes already on the horizon.

The apocalypse had Chapters.

And this was only the first.