We were all at the cabin. My dad and
I were upstairs working out the sleeping arrangements for everyone, since so
many people were staying at the cabin this time. Some people were going to get
beds and some were going to have to sleep on the floor in sleeping bags. I was
feeling frustrated because I did NOT want to sleep on the floor, which was part
of the reason I agreed to come upstairs and help my dad figure out where
everyone would sleep.
Suddenly, there was a lot of
commotion going on downstairs. I didn’t really think much of it, because we
were having a party, after all. (Another reason I was annoyed at the moment: I
was stuck upstairs while everyone was downstairs enjoying the party.) The
commotion only made me feel more irritated.
Joaquin came running upstairs, “We
gotta get out of here!” My dad and I exchanged confused glances.
“What are you talking about?” I
questioned irritably. “The party just started and I haven’t even had the chance
to go downstairs and join in the fun. Plus we’re staying the night here.”
“No, there’s no more party,” Joaquin
began to whisper and the look on his face was starting to make me worried. He was
afraid. “Everyone already got out safely; it’s just us now and them.”
My dad and I had no words. Either
something was very wrong or Joaquin had lost his mind. We were speechless.
“We have to sneak out past them. It’s
the only way out. They’re blocking the door.” Joaquin continued to explain in a
whisper despite our bewildered faces.
The look on our faces must have been
asking, “Who is ‘they’?” because before we could ask, Joaquin urgently whispered,
“Zombies!” He whispered so the zombies wouldn’t hear us, but “ZOMBIES!”
screamed through my mind.
My heart was pounding so loudly, I
was worried the zombies would hear the now rapid rhythm of my heartbeat. My mouth
suddenly dry, my body in a sweat, my mind raced, “Zombies? Zombies! Zombies don’t
exist! How can this be? How do we get away from zombies? I don’t know what to
do! I’ve never had to deal with zombies before!”
Joaquin seemed to read my mind, “Just
act like them. Maybe they won’t know the difference and we can sneak out that
way.”
We walked downstairs slowly and
deliberately, trying to avoid the squeaks in the steps. I peaked around the
corner and saw the zombies milling around the living room. They were hideous!
Their mouths hung open unnaturally wide. Their pale faces were full of scabs, gashes,
and, of course, their lifeless but hungry eyes. Their movements were stiff and
irregular. Their moaning shook my nerves and I felt like sprinting for the
door. I knew I had to stay calm. Even though they seemed so slow, there were so
many of them, I knew I couldn’t get through the crowd alive if I brought
attention to myself with movements of the living.
I anxiously moved slowly with
jolting steps, mimicking their agape mouths and groans. I kept my face and
limbs stiff and rolled my eyes in my head. Their rotted bodies brushed against
mine and it took everything in my power to stop myself from screaming. I must
have been holding my breath, because when I made it outside, I choked the air
back into my lungs. I was crying as my dad, Joaquin, and I rushed down the
driveway of the cabin into the neighborhood.
We caught our breaths once we were
down the street. I don’t know how much time had passed before we were able to
speak.
“We have to find the others,” I
said.
We began searching through the
neighborhood and we saw some people up ahead. We ran up to them and realized
they were zombies almost too late. We stopped in our tracks and dove into the
bushes on the side of the road.
“Can they see us?” I whispered.
“If we don’t move, I don’t think
they’ll be able to make us out,” Joaquin answered, suddenly an expert on
zombies.
My body was shaking. I didn’t know
how I was supposed to remain still. Luckily, the zombies didn’t see us.
“This is real serious,” I stated the
obvious. “Now there are zombies everywhere. It’s going to make it a lot harder
for us to find everyone.”
We crept along in the shadows and
the bushes. We found my mom and my sister hiding in the shrubbery. They were
safe and I began to feel hopeful for the first time.
And then I was alone. I don’t know
how I lost my family or how they lost me. I was just alone and afraid. I
wandered aimlessly and without caution. I saw a group of zombies approaching
and ran to hide. I thought they were a just the doomed hunting for in the night.
I didn’t see that they had a human in their clutches until they were right in
front of my hideout. Before I could even gasp, the zombie bit the unknown girl
on the arm. I knew it was too late for her. She was a zombie now. I turned to
run and crashed right into an open mouthed zombie. The zombie grabbed my arm
with surprising strength. As it was raising my arm to its mouth, I was
paralyzed with fear. All I could do was scream over and over, “Jeanne, wake up!
Jeanne, wake up!” Then, I did.
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