Horrific Shorts: Zombie Edition-Chapter 2010: Story : What the World Takes Back

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Chapter 2010: Story 2010: What the World Takes Back

Kael woke choking.

Not on blood.

On weight.

The air pressed down on him like a living thing, thick and resistant, as if the world itself resented his breathing. He rolled onto his side and retched, blackened saliva splattering the cracked earth.

Lyra was there instantly, hand on his back, steady and firm. “Easy. You’re here.”

“Am I?” Kael rasped.

Eron sat a few steps away, arms wrapped around himself, staring at the ground as though it might speak again. The ruins around them were wrong—frozen mid-collapse. A tower leaned without falling. Dust hung in the air, unmoving.

Time was... hesitant.

Kael pushed himself upright. Pain flared—but something else was missing.

The mark.

He tore back his sleeve.

Where the rune had burned for so long, there was only scarred flesh—dull, gray, and cold.

His breath hitched. “It’s gone.”

Lyra’s jaw tightened. “Not gone. Quiet.”

“That’s worse,” Eron whispered.

Kael tried to summon the familiar heat. Nothing answered. The world didn’t recoil from him now. It watched.

Waiting.

A sound rolled through the ruins—low, grinding, like stone dragged across stone. From the fractures in the sky, shapes began to descend. Not zombies.

Wardens.

Smaller than the first, but many. Dozens. Carved bodies stitched together with runes, eyes glowing with borrowed judgment.

“They’re not here for the boy,” Eron said, voice shaking. “They’re here for you.”

Kael stood anyway, lifting his remaining sword. It felt heavier than before, like it didn’t fully belong to him anymore.

Lyra stepped to his side, weapon ready. “Then they’ll have to go through us.”

The lead Warden spoke without a mouth.

“BALANCE IS OWED.”

The ground behind Kael cracked—and swallowed his shadow.

He staggered, panic slicing through him. His shadow writhed independently, stretching toward the Wardens like a leash pulled tight.

Eron screamed. “It’s taking payment!”

Kael dropped to one knee as memories ripped free—faces of people he’d saved, people he hadn’t. Every choice, every death weighed and counted.

The world wasn’t angry anymore.

It was calculating.

Lyra grabbed his arm. “You don’t get to take him!”

The Wardens advanced.

Kael made his decision.

He slammed his sword into the ground and let go.

Not of the weapon.

Of the fight.

The shadow snapped free, tearing away from him with a sound like ripping flesh. It vanished into the earth, claimed.

The Wardens stopped.

Their eyes dimmed.

“DEBT RECORDED.”

They turned—and walked back into the cracks from which they’d come.

Silence returned.

Kael collapsed fully this time, gasping. Lyra caught him before his head hit the stone.

Eron crawled closer, terrified. “What did it take?”

Kael stared at his trembling hands.

“My immunity,” he said quietly. “The world won’t bend for me anymore.”

Lyra swallowed. “Then how do we survive?”

Kael looked up at the fractured sky, at the Devourer’s faint outline pressing against reality.

“We stop fighting as chosen ones,” he said.

“And start fighting as prey.”

Far beneath them, the Devourer smiled.

The hunt had finally begun.