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How the West Was Zombed – Chapter 129

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Slade had been using his regular voice for a year, but now the rasp was back with a vengeance.

“Who the fuck are you?” Sawbuck asked.

It’d been twenty years since Slade had last seen Sawbuck. The outlaw’s hair had turned gray. His face was wrinkled and leathery, but Slade still recognized him.

Slade puffed on his cigar. “I’m the man that’s going to kill you.”

“Is that so?” Sawbuck asked.

“Yup,” Slade replied.

Clovis and Slim wrenched their hooks out of the zombie, allowing it to drop to the ground. They stepped aside.

“Do I know you, bushwacker?” Sawbuck asked.

“Nope,” Slade replied. “But I know you.”

Sawbuck sneered and tossed Tobias aside. “Lots of people know me. You a bounty hunter?”

“Nope,” Slade replied.

“The law?”

“Nope,” Slade said.

“Then who the hell are you?” Sawbuck asked.

“An interested party,” Slade said.

“Huh,” Sawbuck said. “Well, Mr. Interested Party, if you want to challenge me, it’s your funeral. Here are the rules. You step back fifty paces that-a-way. I’ll step fifty paces back and on the count of three we…”

“Draw,” Slade said as he raised his rifle and shot Sawbuck right through the throat. The outlaw’s face could not contain his shock as he collapsed.

Along his journey, Slade managed to find two Colt pistols to replace the one he’d lost. He dropped his rifle, then drew one of the pistols and walked over to Sawbuck’s carcass and kicked him over onto his back.
Sawbuck clutched his throat as blood sprayed out of it.

“The…rules!”

The last thing Sawbuck ever saw was Slade pointing his Colt at his face.

The last thing Sawbuck ever heard?

“You don’t get rules.”

One…two…three…four…five…six.

Sawbuck was beyond dead and his face was the same consistency of raw hamburger.

“Hey!” Clovis yelled.

Annoyed, Slade holstered his empty pistol, then drew a fully loaded one and pointed it at Clovis and Slim, who instantly threw their hands up.

“Oh shit!” Clovis shouted as he and his hefty accomplice beat a trail out of town.

Slade holstered his pistol and stared down at Sawbuck’s corpse until Miss Bonnie joined him.

“Feel any better?” she asked.

“Nope.”

“Did you think you would?”

“Kinda.”

“I’m sorry,” Miss Bonnie said.

“It’s ok.”

“I thought you weren’t going to use that dumb raspy voice anymore,” Miss Bonnie said.

Slade returned to his regular tone. “Oh. Right.”

Tobias dusted himself off. “Holy shit, Mister! I never thought I’d see the day that someone stood up to Sawbuck Sam. Thank you.”

The young mayor stretched out his hand. Slade took it and tried not to stare at top of Tobias’ ridiculous hat as it flopped up and down during the handshake.

“You travelers or something?” Tobias asked.

“Traveled all the way to be here,” Slade said.

Tobias smiled. “More people? This town sure could use them.”

“Good,” Slade said as he picked up his rifle.

“What’s your name, friend?” Tobias asked.

“Slade. Rainer Slade.”

Tobias didn’t just smile. He glowed. He wrapped his arms around Slade and attached himself to his new hero like a barnacle.

Slade and Bonnie traded confused looks.

“Welcome home, brother!” Tobias cried.

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How the West Was Zombed – Chapter 128

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“You stupid hayseeds have no idea how much you need me, do you?” Sawbuck asked the townsfolk.

“Thirty years,” Sawbuck said. “Three decades I’ve been volunteering my protection for you pathetic suckers and this is how I am repaid.”

The outlaw kicked Tobias in the gut, knocking him onto his back in the dirt.

“Sawbuck,” Tobias said as he stared up at the sky. “It was all my idea. Just let everyone go and let me have it.”

“That’d be too easy,” Sawbuck said. He turned to his lackies. “Bring it out, boys.”

Clovis and Slim went to the back of the wagon and before long they were carrying out a rolled up blanket, roughly six feet in length. On top of the blanket were two long wooden poles with sharp metal hooks on the end.

And it was groaning.

Tobias attempted to lift himself up to see what was going on, but felt down and landed on his side.

Clovis and Slim rolled out the blanket to reveal a restrained zombie. It was a male about thirty years old, dead at least six months. His arms had been hacked off, but his legs still worked. His mouth had a thick piece of rope in it, keeping him from biting, which from the growls he was making, he clearly wanted to bite someone badly.

“You know folks,” Sawbuck said. “For the longest time, I’ve been asking myself, ‘What can I do to make those stupid fucks in Fiddler’s Gulch take me seriously?’”

Clovis and Slim picked the zombie up. Clovis picked up a pole, stabbed it into the zombie’s back and caught his ribs with the hook. Slim did the same.

“I’ve shot so many of you that I lost count,” Sawbuck said. “Shooting you dummies just isn’t doing the trick anymore. So I thought about it. What can I do to impress upon you morons that I’m the boss and I am not to be fucked with?”

Sawbuck grabbed Tobias and lifted him up on his feet.

“And then I met my new friend here,” Sawbuck said as he pointed to the zombie. “And I knew I’d come up with a better way to convince you hicks to do your duty.”

The chains around his legs kept the zombie from walking. It writhed and struggled, but Clovis and Slim held on with their hooks.
“Jesus, Sawbuck,” Tobias said. “Can I pick getting trampled by your horse, instead?”

“That’d be too good for you,” Sawbuck said. “I…”

The sound of wagon wheels and galloping horses interrupted Sawbuck’s words. The outlaw looked down the road to see a wagon train entering town. In the lead wagon sat a redhead and a man with a beard.

“This some kind of trick, boy?” Sawbuck asked.

“No,” Tobias said.

“What is this?”

“I don’t know,” Tobias said. “I swear!”

“Listen up, rubes!” Sawbuck shouted. “From now on, anyone who is man enough to challenge me should challenge me. And if you’re too yellow, then shut the fuck up and start doing what I tell you or be ready to get eaten up and shit out by my pet!”

Sawbuck gripped Tobias’ arm tightly then walked toward the zombie. Clovis undid the rope and the zombie’s teeth chomped up and down until…

Pow. A bullet opened up the back of the zombie’s head. It fell dead, slumping like an unused puppet on the poles held by Clovis and Slim.

Slade slang racked up another bullet in his rifle, then slang it over his shoulder.

“I challenge you.”

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How the West Was Zombed – Chapter 126

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In the history of the West, there wasn’t a job less thankless than that of Mayor of Fiddler’s Gulch. The last three holders of this less than esteemed position had been shot dead.

Even so, Tobias, the current office holder, at the ripe age of twenty, made due. As a sign of his status, he wore a black stovepipe hat. The circle of felt at the top had ripped long ago so it flapped up and down whenever he walked. No suit. Just a plain blue shirt and trousers, both in need of a good washing.

The town was just a small collection of houses and run down stores along a dirt road. Much of the population had either died, been zombified, murdered, or dispersed. Twenty souls were left under the Mayor’s watch.

Tobias strained under the weight of the bricks he was carrying. When he reached the road, he dumped them on the ground, then proceeded to put one in each of the bags of grain that had been lined up.

Arnold Watson had once been a shopkeeper, back when there were people to sell things to.

“What are you doing?” Arnold asked.

“Sam wants ten bags,” Tobias said. “We only got seven so I’m improvising.”

“He’ll check,” Arnold said. “You know he will.”

Tobias put a brick into another bag, then used his hand to scoop grain over it. “Maybe he won’t.”

“He will,” Arnold said. “And then he’ll shoot one of us as an example. He always does.”

The Mayor stood up and threw up his hands. “Well I don’t know what else to do, Arn. Ole Sawbuck ain’t exactly reasonable. He’s taken everything we have and keeps demanding more.”

“Lying to him is a good way to get one of us killed,” Arnold said.

“What do you think will happen when he shows up and we only have seven bags?” Arnold asked. “We apologize and he tells us that’s ok? He’ll give us more time and come back for the other three later? No. We know he’ll definitely shoot one of us if we only have seven. At least this way there’s a chance, a small chance that he might not and by the time he figures it out, we’ll have hightailed it out of here.”

“We’re just supposed to leave?” Arnold asked. “Where to?”

“Hell if I know,” Tobias replied. “But we can’t stay here. Sawbuck’s cleaned us out but he keeps trying to squeeze blood out of a stone.”

Eleanor Stuckey, an old gal who’d been a school marm in a previous life, sat on her porch knitting.

“Listen to the Mayor, Arnold,” she said. “You know he’s right.”

“Damn it,” Arnold said as he grabbed a brick and shoved it deep down into a bag. “Fine. But take that stupid hat off.”

“I like it,” Tobias said. “No one told Mayor Bratton to take it off.”

“He wore it well,” Arnold said. “You look like a jackass.”

“Eleanor,” Tobias said. “Does this hat make me look like a jackass?”

The old lady looked up from her yarn and squinted at the Mayor through her spectacles.

“Nope. You look all kinds of regal.”

Tobias opened up an empty bag, tossed a brick into it, then pored some grain out of another bag onto that. “You hear that, Arn? I’m regal.”

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How the West Was Zombed – Chapter 125

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A zombie had impaled itself on a cactus. Try as he might, the sharp needles just keot digging in to his rotten skin. Whoever he’d been in his previous life, he’d seen better days. His jaw bone was gone and he writhed there, baking in the hot sun.

Thwap. A bullet pierced his brain and put him out of his misery.

Twenty yards away, Miss Bonnie, from the passenger seat of a covered wagon, pulled her eye away from a rifle.

“Got another one,” she said.

Slade, who was doing the driving, had grown a long beard. It was caked with dust and his mouth was dry.

“You should be resting,” Slade replied.

“I’m fine,” Miss Bonnie said.

“I know,” Slade said. “Not you I’m worried about.”

Miss Bonnie rested her hands on her enormous belly. “Are you kidding? She’s ready to fight zombies on her own.”

Slade scoffed. “‘She’ huh?”

“I can tell,” Miss Bonnie insisted. “If it were a boy it’d been napping in there like a lazy slug.”

There’s a funny thing about being handy with the steel during a zombie outbreak. You sure do make a lot of friends.

A year prior, Slade and Miss Bonnie had set out from Highwater with only the supplies they could carry. Along the way, they helped out a stranger here, a drifter there. They rescued folks from zombie attacks and even brought a few degenerates who’d been exploiting the lawlessness of a zombified West to justice.

They couldn’t help it. Human suffering just wasn’t something they were willing to turn a blind eye to. And so, by the time they made it to Arizona, their pilgrimage had turned into one long wagon train with over four hundred people in total – men, women and children of all ages.

A middle-aged Swede galloped his horse up next to Slade.

“Sorry to trouble you, Marshall, but people have been asking if we can stop for a spell.”

Slade balked at that proposal. “Tell them to hang in there, Gus. Fiddler’s Gulch is just a mile or two away.”

“You got it, Marshall.” Gus turned his horse around and galloped to the back of the wagon train.

“You’ve been saying its only a mile away all day,” Miss Bonnie said.

“I don’t know,” Slade said. “Everything’s changed. There weren’t that many settlements here when I was a boy.”

“Can this many people even fit in Fiddler’s Gulch?” the redhead asked.

“Probably not,” Slade said. “There was barely a hundred people when I lived there. I reckon there will be room to spread out though.”

Slade puffed on his cigar. “And when is everyone going to stop calling me’ Marshall’?”

“When you stop acting like one,” Miss Bonnie said.

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How the West Was Zombed – Chapter 124

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Chestnut Hill, MA

A proper lady dressed all in purple strolled through the cobblestone path of a cemetery. She stumbled in fancy shoes she wasn’t used to wearing. Her corset made her feel like she was slowly suffocating to death. The hat, with all of its festooned plumage, seemed a bit much.

She reached her destination to find a grim faced man standing over a grave stone.

“I’m sorry I’m late,” she said as stepped next to the man. “This dress has at least a hundred buttons and I feel like if I move too fast they’re all going to pop off in every direction.”

“Ah yes, Annabelle,” the man replied. “Welcome to the tortures of the high society female.”

Annabelle reached her hand around her backside and tugged at the fabric. “It feels like its wedged between my cheeks but I can’t…ugh…get at it because there’s an iron bar.”

The man chuckled. “Yes. Fashion can be quite elaborate I’m afraid. In fact, I dare say at first I wasn’t sure if that was a hat atop your head or if an ill-tempered pheasant had found a new home.”

Annabelle snickered then straightened her face and looked around. “Where is everyone, Owen?”

“It will just be us I’m sorry to say,” Owen said. “I, of course, would not dream of missing the service of my dearly departed brother. But alas, the remaining Faradays have memories like elephants when it comes to holding a grudge.”

Owen was a few years older than Doc. His hair had a touch of gray. His face was clean shaven and he was starting to go bald, but there was a definite family resemblance, both in terms of physical appearance and uppity demeanor.

“That’s a shame,” Annabelle said.

Annabelle stared at the gravestone.

Elias T. Faraday
1843-1880
Medical Doctor. Misunderstood Genius. Proponent of the Curative Properties of Cocaine and Regular Gynecological Examinations
Accidentally Caused the Western Zombie Apocalypse.
Felt Really Bad About It.
Gave His Life to Keep it from Spreading East.
May He Be Judged Less Harshly By the Wise Citizens of Tomorrow Than the Idiots of Today
“Quite ironic, actually,” Owen said. “Elias long complained that our reputation as pickpockets held him back in life but no one ever discusses those unfounded rumors anymore. Rather, we’re known as the family of the man who zombified the West.”

“He didn’t mean to.”

“Of that I am sure but try telling that to the rabble,” Owen said. “Mother and Father can’t show their face at church anymore. Our sister and brother refuse to speak his name. Even the more respectable, wealthy side of the family has been affected. Word has it that our estranged uncle shall be issuing a letter to the press denouncing Elias and distancing himself from the Chestnut Hill side of the family.”

“That’s terrible,” Annabelle said.

“It’s up to you,” Owen said. “But I don’t think anyone would blame you if you reverted to your maiden name. It isn’t easy being a Faraday these days.”

“No,” Annabelle said. “I won’t do that. Doc’s the only one who ever cared about me. ”

“Then I see Elias chose his wife well,” Owen said. “Tell me, how did you two meet?”

“A broth…”

Annabelle caught herself. “A house. A uh…a book house. What do you call one of those places where they keep lots of books?”

“A library?”

“That’s it,” Annabelle said.

“Are there many libraries in the West?” Owen asked.

“Oh a shit ton,” Annabelle replied. “One on every corner. We both reached for the same book and hit it off.”

“Which book?”

“Oh uh…some fruity English poet,” Annabelle said. “The stone is lovely.”

“With your generosity to thank for that,” Owen said. “I only wish it could remain.”

“They really won’t let it stay?” Annabelle asked.

“Not a single cemetery in the entire city would have it,” Owen said. “I was given strict instructions that after our impromptu service here it is to be removed by the end of the day lest it be destroyed.”
“I…I don’t know what to say.”

“It’s all right,” Owen said. “I’ve enlisted some hearty men to deliver it to my home. I think I’ll put it on bricks and use it as a coffee table so I can remember my brother fondly during afternoon tea.”

Annabelle laid a rose down. Owen checked his pocket watch.

“Well, I suppose we musn’t dilly dally in getting you to your ship.”

Owen offered the lady his arm. She took it and they strolled to the road.

“Are zombies as hideous as the papers say?” Owen asked.

“And then some,” Annabelle said.

“Egads,” Owen said. “Now this expedition you’re going on. What is it exactly?”

“I’m going to educate the world on the curative properties of cocaine and gyn-a…gyn-a…I’m going to help women get their under-business checked out.”

“The latter part sounds absolutely scandalous but how will you achieve the first part?”

Annabelle reached into her pocket, pulled out a bottle and handed it to Owen.

He read the label.

“Doc Faraday’s Miracle Cure-All. Now with More Cocaine. Vampire’s Blood Free.”

Owen pulled out the cork and took a swig. He swished it around then swallowed. “Mmm…minty!”

“Yes,” Annabelle said. “The manufacturer was able improve the taste.”

“You know I head the most interesting rumor that various beverage companies are working on a fizzy, syrupy concoction that has cocaine in it.”

“Are you shitting me?” Annabelle asked. “I’ve already got ten thousand cases loaded aboard the Mystic Dawn.”

“Oh I’m sure they’ll sell quite well in London, seeing as how its a drink reminiscent of the one that ruined America,” Owen said. “Just to stick it to us Yanks. If you ask me, Parliament crossed the line when they published that letter explaining how we got what was coming to us and that they would be steadfastly rooting for the zombies.”

They reached the street. A coach with a driver waited for Annabelle.

“This is where I leave you,” Owen said. “A shame to not have known you longer, sister.”

“Leave some tea on Doc’s stone for me,” Annabelle said.

Owen and Annabelle hugged. Annabelle raised a curious eyebrow when she realized that her brother-in-law was lingering just a bit too long.

“OK then,” Annabelle said as she extricated herself and walked to the coach.

Something felt off. She patted her pocket.

“Owen.”

“Hmm?”

Annabelle put her hand out. “My coin purse?”

Owen pulled a small leather purse out of his pocket and forked it over. “Oh my! How did that get there?”

Annabelle shook her head as the driver opened the door. He was an elderly Irishman with a tweed cap who spoke in a thick brogue.

“Pardon me, ma’am,” the driver said. “But I’ve been at this job for many a year and I thought I had the privilege of transporting just about every proper lady there is in Boston Town, but you’re new to me. Might I inquire your name?”

“Annabelle Garv…Farraday. Annabelle Farraday.”

“Aw shite. Is that so?”

Annabelle blinked. “Is there a problem?”

“Aye,” the driver said as he pulled two bags out of the coach and tossed them at her feet. “It’s not enough that you pukes subsidize yourselves by picking the pockets of decent people but now you had to go and fill the West with ambulatory dead folk! Me son just put down stakes in Nebraska and now I’ll never hear from him ever again!”

The driver hopped into his seat and was off, making sure to ride through a puddle that sprayed dirty water all over Annabelle’s fancy dress.

Irked but not defeated, she picked up her bags and started walking. She had a ship to catch.

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How the West Was Zombed – Part 12 – One Week Later

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The Legion Corporation has been defeated…for now.

Alas, the West has been zombed.

Where will our cast of characters go from here?

Chapter 118       Chapter 119     Chapter 120

Chapter 121     Chapter 122

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How the West Was Zombed – Almost Done

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Well…not quite almost.

But, the overall story itself has been told.

The East was saved. The West was zombed.

All the characters have done what they needed to do.

Now there just needs to be one last part to say where they’re headed in the future.

Sooo…this is great. I’m at 89,000 words and while I still have a lot to go, the end is in sight.

Thank you 3.5 readers. I can’t wait to publish this bad boy, collect my sweet check and go buy some mozzarella sticks at Applebees.

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How the West Was Zombed – Chapter 115

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Miss Bonnie was feeling rather discouraged.

Her hands had been tied behind her back. Her legs were bound together. Like a slab of beef, she was left to hang upside down from the rafters of a dusty barn by a length of rope tied around her feet.

There was enough slack in the rope that her head was only a few feet off the ground. She felt dizzy as all the blood rushed to her head, turning her face roughly the same color as her hair.

Her resilience remained.

“This is bullshit,” she said.

Standing Eagle’s warriors had been similarly restrained. Charging Bobcat and Screeching Owl hanged to the left of Miss Bonnie, while Crafty Fox and Wandering Snake hanged to her right.

Charging Bobcat flexed, shook, shimmied, writhed his body all about, grunting and groaning, fighting for his freedom.

“You will strain yourself,” a calm Snake said.

“So we just do nothing?” a belligerent Bobcat replied.

“We wait for the spirits to make their will known,” Snake said.

“That’s a good way to get yourself killed,” Bobcat said.

Bobcat gritted his teeth as he struggled. Finally, he shouted loudly. Angrily.

“Arrrrrrrrrrrrghhh!”

The room went silent.

“It is a good way to not lose your mind,” Snake said.

The barn doors swung open.

Lamont walked in and laid his bag down on a table that had been set up for him in the middle of the barn.

“Oi,” the cockney vampire said. “Let’s have a lil look see at me crowded space, yeah?”

The vampire opened his bag and laid out a variety of tools. First, there was a rusty pair of pliers.

“Pinchers they is,” Lamont said. “Yank your scratchers right off your pointers.”

Filled with fear and confusion, the hostages took in the show. Lamont was happy to spend some time instructing his captives on the tortures he had in store for them.

Next was a pair of scissors. “Nice snip snips,” Lamont said. “Take off a toesy woesy they will.”

Out came a long, sharp knife. “Slasher. Now that’ll rearrange your gullivah all right..”

“What’s he saying?” Bobcat whispered.

“I don’t know,” Miss Bonnie replied.

“What tongue is he speaking in?” Bobcat asked.

“English,” Miss Bonnie said. “But I think like…from England.”

Lamont pulled out more items. A cat of nine tails. A length of chain. A few collars with spikes pointing inward.

He chuckled as he pulled out the last item – a corkscrew.

The vampire walked over to Miss Bonnie, leaned down in front of her face and held the corkscrew in front of her eyes.

“One lil pop in your thinker in just the right spot love and youse a thinker no more,” Lamont said. “A blood bag forever after. Stay nice and fresh and give us some drinky poos you will.”

“I don’t get it,” Bobcat said.

“He’s going to perform a crude surgery on our brains so we won’t think any more but we’ll remain alive and pump blood that will be harvested for his kind to feed on,” Snake explained.

“Shut yer gob,” Lamont said as he shook his knife at Snake. “You’ll get your turn.”
Lamont picked the knife up off the table and sliced the rope that was holding up Miss Bonnie, allowing her to drop face first on the floor.
“Miss Bonnie said as she lifted her head up. Her face was bruised and bloodied from the fall. “And here I just thought he was some kind of fucked up pervert.”

Lamont brushed the palm of his hand across Miss Bonnie’s cheek.

“Mmm,” the vampire said. “Nice and soft. A pretty piece of flesh.”

“Shit,” Miss Bonnie said.

“Upsie daisy now,” Lamont said as he grabbed Miss Bonnie by the arm and dragged her over to the table. The vampire propped his vampire up in a chair and looked down on her.

“‘Ello poppet,” Lamont said. “Fancy a spot of fun? A bit of rough and tumble, ay? A little bit of the ole in and out? Nice day for a proper rogering in’it?”

Miss Bonnie responded with a gooey glob of spit that launched from her mouth to her captor’s face.

“We need to do something,” Bobcat said.

Snake’s eyes were closed as part of his meditation. “If we are meant to do something the opportunity will present itself.”

“But…”

“Trust in the spirits to make all right,” Snake said.

Lamont wiped the spit off his face and laughed. Then his eyes turned blank and blood red. He stared into Miss Bonnie’s eyes.

“You want it, don’t you love?” the vampire asked.

All the fight went out of Miss Bonnie. “Oh…I do…”

“That’s more like it,” Lamont said with a grin. He cut the rope away from Miss Bonnie’s feet and hands, then set his knife down on the table.

Miss Bonnie’s lips went all pouty. She batted her eyelashes. “Please. Don’t make me wait for it any longer.”

Lamont picked up Miss Bonnie, threw her down on the table, then started unbuttoning his shirt.

“Snake!” Bobcat said. “The woman!”

Snake kept his eyes closed. “Patience.”
Lamont and Miss Bonnie’s lips met, their tongues twirled together. But as the vampire reached a hand into the redhead’s blouse, her hand was reaching for something else.

The knife.

She seized it and with a swift motion, sliced open Lamont’s throat. Black blood rained out of it and onto her face.

The vampire stumbled back as Miss Bonnie stood up and pointed the knife at him.

Lamont reached for his throat, which was already beginning to heal. By the look on his face, he was clearly perplexed.

“A trick doesn’t work on someone that knows it’s coming, asshole!” Miss Bonnie said as she poked the air with her new blade, putting the vampire on the defensive.

Bobcat registered his disbelief. “What the…”

“Spirits,” Snake said.

“Spirits my ass,” Bobcat said. “That is one crazy white bitch.”

Lamont charged at Miss Bonnie. Together, they crashed into the table, smashing it to pieces. The knife was lost in the scuffle, leaving Miss Bonnie defenseless.

The vampire stood and grabbed Miss Bonnie’s feet. He started to drag her away. In vain, Miss Bonnie dug her nails into the dirt, as if that would somehow make her immobile.

Luckily, she grabbed a broken table leg just in time.

Lamont’s fangs popped out. He raised his right arm up ready to strike only to recoil in pain as Miss Bonnie plunged the table leg into his heart.

Shocked, the vampire looked at his impaled chest, then at Miss Bonnie, then back to his chest. He did this a few more times before finally voicing his confusion.

“But…but…youse a girl!”

The vampire’s eyes bugged out of his head, his veins pulsed, his skin turned purple and then like an overfilled balloon, his body exploded, sending black blood, bile, guts and parts everywhere.

Miss Bonnie wiped the blood out of her eyes. She was drenched.

“And don’t you forget it, motherfucker!”

“I…I am impressed,” Bobcat said.

Snake’s eyes opened. “Spirits. Am I right?”

“Fucking men,” Miss Bonnie said. “Always thinking with their peckers.”

The doors bursted open again. Miles entered in werewolf form, with Slade and Sarah on his back.

“Bonnie!” Slade shouted. “I’m here to rescue you!”

Slade hopped off of Miles’ back, allowing Sarah to rest on the werewolf as if he were a big furry couch. He looked around at the blood soaked room, then at Bonnie. He instantly realized how stupid his words were.

Miss Bonnie picked up the knife then walked over to Snake. She started sawing away at the rope that was holding the shaman captive.

“Fucking men,” she repeated.

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How the West Was Zombed – Holy Crap

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Holy Crap 3.5 Readers.

Six months later, I finally closed the major arc of the book.

Every great story begins with a question.  Or questions.

The main one was would Blythe carry out his mission to transport zombies across the Mississippi River?

Answer – spoiler alert – no!

Still much more to go, but now it is mostly batting cleanup.

Oh I can taste all that sweet, sticky Amazon cash.  I’m going to eat at Applebees for a week.

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How the West Was Zombed – Chapter 112

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The zombies clawed over each other until they finally poured out of the hole that Zeke had torn through the box car roof. A few cars back, they were emerging through the holes that Miles had torn as well.

Slade laid down the heat and put bullets into brains. He quickly ran out of ammo and with no time to reload, he drew Gunther’s knife and stabbed furiously at the zombies that surrounded him, all the while struggling to maintain balance as the train cars rattled due to the increased speed.

A zombified Mr. O’Brien, once Highwater’s friendly photographer, was decapitated by Miles’ claws while Slade plunged his blade into the brain of what had once been Leo, the town’s preeminent drunk.

As soon as they cleared out the zombies in their way, the lawman and the young werewolf ran, with more zombies in hot pursuit.

Slade reloaded, fumbling to fill his pistols with silver-tipped bullets and maintain his footing at the same time.

It was day now. The sun shined brightly and warmed Slade’s face as he blasted a zombie that was grabbing his arm.

The zombies stopped. Slade was puzzled by this until Miles pointed up ahead.

Blythe.

The vampire was using his covered up hostage as a human shield, one arm locked around her neck while his free hand pointed his revolver at Slade.

“Stand down, zombies,” Blythe said. “Mr. Slade and I need to have a little chat.”

Slade and the vampire locked eyes.

“Drop your steel,” Blythe ordered.

Reluctantly, Slade set his pistols down on the boxcar roof.

“And you,” the vampire said as he looked to Miles. “Lose the fur.”

Miles morphed into his boy form.

“Bonnie!” Slade shouted. “Are you all right?”

“Mmmphh!” was the hostage’s muffled reply.

Blythe shook his head and pulled the sheet from his captive’s head.

Sarah. Her mouth was gagged but the fear in her eyes was palpable.

The vampire guffawed. Slade, for the first time since he’d become a U.S. Marshall, displayed a moment of weakness and dropped to his knees.

“Oh,” Blythe said. “Look at you, Slade. You’re too easy.”

“But you said…”

“What?” Blythe asked. “That I took the woman you love the most with me? I lied! That’s what vampire lawyers do!”

Slade stood up.

“The tiny fragments of whatever was left of your heart just snapped, didn’t they?” Blythe asked. “Ms. Lassiter is gone. I’d tell you that she’s dead but that’d be too easy. She’ll wish she was I guarantee you.”

The vein in Slade’s forehead pulsated to a boiling point.

“You’ll hate yourself forever for failing her,” Blythe said.

The vampire nudged his head toward Sarah. “You’ll hate this one for not being your beloved Bonnie…and you’ll hate yourself for hating her.”

Blythe pressed the revolver up against Sarah’s head. “Do I have to splatter her brains to get you to make a deal? Or will you realize once and for all that all a soul does is tear a man up inside and keep him from being his best possible self?”

Miles tapped Slade on the shoulder. The lawman ignored it.

“I’ll draw up a new contract later,” Blythe said. “But for now, a verbal accord will do. Agree to sell your soul to the Chairman or your say goodbye to your second best squeeze.”

“Slade,” Miles said as he continued to tug on the lawman’s arm.

“Not now,” Slade replied.

The vampire cocked the hammer of his revolver with his thumb. “What’s it going to be, Slade?”

Slade stammered. “I…I…”

“Slade!” Miles shouted.

“What?!” Slade shouted back.

“It sure is a nice day, isn’t it?” the boy asked.

Slade squinted his eyes as he looked toward the sun, then back at Miles.

It was time for Slade to hope.

The lawman dove for one of his pistols. The boy wolfed out to his massive furry form, then picked up Slade and through him off the side of the car.

Slade hurtled through to the air in a leftward arc. He took one shot at the vampire before being caught in by Miles’ left paw.

The young werewolf had dug the claws of his right paw into the side of the box car. With all his might, he held on.

Slade looked down. The ground below quickly turned into water. The train was now over the Sturtevant Bridge, darting across the Mississippi River.

Blythe, still holding onto Sarah, peaked over the side and scoffed. “You missed!”

Slade sneered. “Did I?”

Blythe looked himself over, wondering what he’d missed until he saw it. Slade’s crack shot had pierced the chain holding his golden medallion, the gift from the Chairman bestowing upon him the right to be one of few vampires allowed to bask in the sun.

The vampire, for once in his long existence, was afraid. He dropped his revolver and fumbled to catch his talisman but it was too late.

It slipped off his neck and fell through the air into the water below.

Blythe hyperventilated. His face turned purple.

The vampire let go of Sarah and clutched his neck and struggled to breathe.

“Do you think…”

Blythe could barely get the words out.

“… this changes anything?”

The vampire’s eyes bugged out of his head. The veins in his face turned black. “We are legion…for we are many!”

Blythe pushed Sarah off the side of the box car. He then exploded in a burst of sticky, black blood. What had once been the Legion Corporation’s most cunning strategist now painted the roof and side of the box car.

There was no time to celebrate. Sarah screamed through her gag as she fell through the air. Slade reached for her but missed.

Miles roared. He let go of the box car, pulled Slade closer to his body, then caught Sarah.

As the trio fell, a few words from a familiar, overused voice carried through the wind into Miles’ highly sensitive werewolf ears.

“…the open minded masses of the future will no doubt look upon him with great reverence as the man who destroyed the Sturtevant Bridge…”

The young werewolf recognized Doc’s voice and realized no good could come out of this third person tirade. He hugged the two humans tight then maneuvered himself to take the impact of the water landing with his back.

The trio plunged deep into the river as they struggled to reach the surface, the sounds of a tremendous explosion filled their ears.

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