Horrific Shorts: Zombie Edition-Chapter 2012: Story : Refusal of the Equal

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Chapter 2012: Story 2012: Refusal of the Equal

Kael should have turned.

That was the rule now.

The bite throbbed beneath its burned flesh, a deep ache that pulsed in time with his heart. No glow. No cleansing fire. Just infection waiting patiently for permission.

The world waited with it.

They ran at first light.

Cultists poured through the ruins behind them, herding the dead with whistles carved from bone. Zombies moved with intent—cutting off paths, driving them forward like prey into a narrowing corridor of streets.

Lyra fired in short bursts, precise, efficient. “They’re steering us.”

Eron clutched his head, staggering. “They think he’ll break.”

Kael laughed—a dry, broken sound. “They’re not wrong.”

They reached a broken amphitheater half-sunk into the earth, its stone seats cracked and overgrown with ash-thorn. Lyra slammed a barricade into place as Kael collapsed onto the steps, breath ragged.

His skin was hot.

Too hot.

Eron knelt beside him, panic rising. “It’s happening. I can feel it.”

Kael’s vision blurred. Shadows stretched too long. Sounds warped, overlapping. Hunger crawled into his throat—sharp and invasive.

The infection was knocking.

Lyra grabbed his face, forcing him to look at her. “Stay with me.”

Kael’s jaw trembled. “I don’t know if I can.”

“You don’t get to decide alone,” she snapped. “Not after everything.”

The cultists appeared at the amphitheater’s rim, fanning out like judges. Their leader raised a hand, and the dead froze mid-step.

“Behold,” she called, voice echoing. “Equality. The Key made flesh.”

Kael forced himself to stand. Every nerve screamed. The world leaned in, expectant.

The Devourer pressed closer—not visible, but present. A pressure behind his eyes. A whisper at the edge of thought.

Let go.

Become simple.

Eron screamed.

The boy’s mark flared—not bright, but sharp. A blade of sensation ripped through Kael’s chest, grounding him in agony that was unmistakably his.

“Don’t you dare,” Eron cried. “You taught me choice!”

Kael fell to his knees.

The hunger surged.

So did something else.

Defiance.

Kael drove his remaining sword into his own palm, piercing clean through. Pain exploded—pure, anchoring, human. Blood poured, red and real, splashing onto stone that did not glow or answer.

The hunger recoiled.

The cultists shouted in confusion.

Kael gasped, shaking, but still himself. “You want equal?” he rasped. “Fine.”

He tore the blade free and stood, swaying but upright.

“I choose to bleed,” he said. “And still say no.”

The world shuddered.

Not in anger.

In resistance.

The dead convulsed, losing coordination. Whistles fell silent. The Devourer’s pressure withdrew—frustrated, denied.

Lyra stared at Kael, awe and terror mixing. “What did you do?”

Kael looked at his bleeding hand. “I refused the shortcut.”

Eron laughed through tears. “You broke another rule.”

“No,” Kael said softly. “I used it.”

The cultists fled as the amphitheater cracked, stone grinding like teeth.

Kael collapsed—but breathing.

Still human.

Far beneath the world, the Devourer shifted.

Not smiling now.

Calculating.

Because prey that refuses to run...

Becomes something far more dangerous.