The feral zombie growled again, and Jason swore that it was trying to speak. As if there were words in some strange language hidden between the growls. The pack inched closer. Jason considered his blowtorch, but they’d be on him in the time it took to light it.
The wind shifted, and the stench from the rotting dogs filled their noses.
“Oh God.” Catherine squeezed his hand tighter, drawing blood.
Sam tensed, its haunches flexing beneath gorestained fur. The other twelve dogs in the pack growled in unison.
Jason tensed. “Catherine—”
The zombie leaped, trailing a length of purple intestine behind it.
“Run!”
Jason shoved Catherine forward, not daring to look over his shoulder. The dog panted behind him, the harsh, ragged breathing sounding like a steam engine. The rest of the pack followed its lead. Their untrimmed nails clicked on the pavement, nipping at his heels.
“The torch,” Catherine gasped. “Use it!”
“No time. Keep running!”
They dashed from the alley and into the street, weaving their way around wrecked and abandoned vehicles. The dogs pursued them.
“High ground,” Jason shouted. “We need to find higher ground. Some place where they can’t climb.”
Catherine darted towards a parked doubledecker tour bus, and scrambled up over the hood. Jason followed her. The steel buckled under their feet. They huddled together on the roof as the barking pack surrounded the vehicle. One of the dogs tried to leap onto the hood, but it slipped back off. Its claws screeched across the metal like nails on a chalkboard.
Jason’s throat burned. He tried to work up some saliva so that he could talk.
“What—what now?” Catherine gasped.
“I don’t know.”
“Can they get up here?”
“I don’t think so. We’re safe.” Even as he said it, he had to suppress a laugh.
The dogs attempted a few more leaps, and then gave up in frustration. The leader of the pack raised its snout and howled. Then the other dogs joined it. Catherine sat the meat cleaver aside and put her hands over her ears. “Make them stop!”
But they didn’t stop. The hellish cacophony grew louder and more frantic. Soon, the dog’s cries were answered. A dozen human zombies appeared from different buildings along the street. Some carried weapons. Others barely carried themselves. One particularly ripe cadaver had been split open from groin to neck, and its insides were a yawning, empty cavity. Jason wondered how it continued to function. The creatures crept closer, their stench reaching the trapped couple before the zombies did. They surrounded the lorry.
One of the zombies smiled, revealing blackened nubs of broken teeth.
Catherine screamed, and Jason bit his tongue to keep from doing the same.
“Wh-what?” Jason stammered.
Out of the corner of his eye, Jason saw more of the creatures approaching. The street was alive with the dead. The dogs were growing restless.
“Hellhounds on our trail. Just like Robert Johnson.” Jason was a big fan of pre-war American Blues.
He reached out, took Catherine’s hand, and gave her a gentle squeeze. Then he grinned.
“What then?” he asked the creatures.
The lead zombie frowned.
“I mean, if we accept—if we let you kill us quickly—what will you do with us after?”
Catherine stared at Jason, her mouth hanging open. Jason winked at her.
“Have you lost your mind?” she hissed.
“We’d prefer not to be eaten,” Jason told the corpses. “Is that possible?”
Catherine gasped. “Now look—”
The zombie interrupted her.
“No,” Jason said. “I’ll do it from up here. You get the bodies when I’m finished.”
“I’ll do it, or we’ll sit up here all day.”
Another zombie pulled the first aside.