As one, the dead
animals lunged at her. Their voices joined into a ridiculous cacophony.
Growls and snarls erupted from every dead throat. The one parrot in the
crowd, its white eyes glaring while it flapped towards her, called out a
scratchy caw.
The
animals came at her in waves. Rats clawed over cats. Dogs raced ahead.
They crowded on top of each other and pushed each other up the sewer
walls in undulating rows of undead flesh.
Sam
wasted no time turning heel. She ran back as fast as her legs would
move. Some of the animals outpaced her. A pair of dogs caught up to her
easily, even as the lethargy of death dragged at them.
The
dogs fell on Sam, biting at her heels, lunging towards her as she ran.
One leapt and caught her in the heel. its teeth sank into the flesh of
her calf. Another, sensing the opportunity, jumped and caught her in the
thigh. The two dogs fell into each other, and she wrenched her leg free
at the cost of both a fresh hole in her pants and part of her leg.
She
kicked away the entangled dogs and managed to right herself before any
of the rats or the bird caught her. She ran all the way back into the
alchemy lab and tried to slam the door shut before the dogs scrambled
back to their feet. They managed to shove their snouts into the open
door. She kicked at them until they pulled back and she slammed it shut.
Now
trapped in the room with an entire herd of domesticated zombies outside
snarling, snapping, grinding and biting, the worn metal of the door
would hold them out, but no other way out existed unless she liquefied
herself and went out a drain.
Sam
cast panicked eyes around the room. She wondered which of the fluids
and chemicals in the various jars and flasks held flammable liquid. She
thought of improvising a Molotov cocktail using the colorful bottles
arrayed on the tables in the room. Strips of the cultist's robes would
serve as a fuse.
Sam
stopped for a moment, remembering the cultist's robes. With these
animals loose in the sewers, the cultists would want some way to protect
and recognize each other. They would want to ensure the cultists
themselves would not be attacked as they made their way from room to
room. They'd want it to be dead simple. Her new friend left unmentioned this important detail in his
scrawled notes. He must've known about the horde of undead pets.
Sam
had no other options available to her. She reasoned this must be how their twisted system worked. She started to strip the man she had beaten
either unconscious or dead. She again didn't bother to check as she
heaved his limbs around, trying to remove his robe.
Sam trusted her instinct. Still, she hesitated after putting on the robe. She could
sit here and wait for the cultists to come and find her after
investigating the commotion and risk she'd be able to deal with them.
Maybe one would come alone. Or a dozen would surround the
blocked door and she'd be as dead as if she let the monsters outside eat
her. She always courted risk. This time she figured the robes must be
how they communicated to these undead creatures.
Hedging
her bets, she sniffed around the bottles until she found one that stunk
of alcohol. She ripped a strip off the alchemist's pants, and stuffed
it into the neck of the bottle, plugging it up. A striker for Bunsen
burners lay on the table holding Mr. Snowball's body. She didn't light
the Molotov cocktail, but she held the striker, ready to ignite it.
She threw wide open the door against the snarls, growls, and scrabbling scratches she heard
from the other side. The zombie horde persisted. She suspected the
magic animating them caused them to pursue targets until their bodies
dissolved into mush, or until their target died.
Holding
high her Molotov cocktail and readying the striker, she flung the door
open wide. Using her broken hand hurt but she gritted her teeth against
the pain.
The animals flowed past her. They didn't look at her.
Instead, they fell on the body of the man she stole the robe from, tearing
him to pieces. Sam stood still as the animals stampeded past her. She
didn't want to risk drawing their attention by moving.
Support creative writers by reading their stories on Royal Road, not stolen versions.
The
blood didn't flow onto the floor as the animals gnawed at the body. Rather, it floated up into their mouths. More
than undeath went into the contract animating the animals. Now, having
threatened her life twice, she needed to find out what the hell it was.
On a whim and against her better judgment, Sam spoke up and ordered the horde, "Stop."
The animals stopped savaging the body and stood motionless. Not understanding the mechanism by which this happened, she tried, "Sit."
Each
animal in its own way sat down. The cats and dogs sat. All the rats
squatted low on all four paws. The parrot perched on the bench by the
mauled alchemist. Strange magic, Sam thought, because in life none of
these animals would understand those words, much less obey them.
"Stay," she said, and she made her way out of the room and shut the door. Wondering what would have happened if she said "die" or "sleep."
She decided to find out. She opened the door where the zombie herd still sat awaiting their next command.
"Die," she spoke in a clear, firm voice.
As
one, the animals' eyes rolled up into their heads, and whatever magic
animating them evaporated. Dozens of corpses piled on top of each other,
rats, cats, and dogs all took on the form of natural death. The parrot
fell from its bench.
Sam understood less the more she learned. She thought of searching for Missy's dog
but abandoned the idea because too many bodies piled up. She shut the
door and worked her way further down the sewer. The thin electrical
light guided her.
Further
into the tunnels, more light spilled from an opening.
She made her way towards it, creeping up in her brand new cult robes.
Looking inside the new room, she saw a sewer junction where three tunnels spilled into a small cistern leading into the main tunnel she occupied.
This
room glowed with oil lamps attached to the walls. She wondered how they
kept these rooms dry against the rain and the sewage. Did they divert
sewage? Did they brick up the tunnels? She filed these away as questions
to investigate the answers for later.
The
room itself had high, arched ceilings, and brick walls patched with
concrete. The floors were dirty brick, covered in filth. Around the
circular room sat cages of various shapes and sizes. Each cage held a
different animal, or a group of animals trapped together. Every single
animal in the cages was dead yet moved.
Another
cultist labored against an animal's body in the center of the room
facing away from her. This time the table sat arrayed with ritual
symbols and runes inscribed into the stone of the table. She couldn't
make out the inscription enough to interpret the working unfolding before
her. The man performing the ritual offered hearts, brains, and lungs,
all extracted from the animals they were trying to resurrect. At that price the
cultists must've killed a dozen animals to get one undead.
This
time Sam didn't need to ask questions. She crept up behind the cultist before he completed his dark working. She slipped her arm around his
throat, one hand behind his head, favoring the broken hand. She
squeezed. The man struggled. He tried to swipe at her. He tried to claw her face. Luckily, this cult
wasn't interested in working with trained fighters.
The
man collapsed unconscious on the floor. She gave him a good kick to
make sure he wasn't faking. She decided
she was safe enough to begin investigating the room when he didn't cry out.
First,
she examined the seal on the stone table, along with an unfortunate
rat. The seal was a standard invocation, offering body parts in
exchange for power. Like all magic, if the deal was accepted, the
contract fulfilled, then the body parts would disappear into black
smoke.
Several
parts of the seal were unfamiliar to her. She cast her eyes around the
room, wishing she thought to bring a writing implement and paper with her
so she could copy the seal.
She did her best to memorize it. She would go and visit Emile later and
ask him what the symbols meant and how they were worked into the ritual.
Sam
started to make her way around the cages crowding the room. They formed
rows and columns, a ringed circumference of the room. Within each one,
zombie animal eyes stared back out at her. She started looking for dogs,
hoping to find the Doberman Pinscher Missy hired her for.
After
some time she came on a large cage with a large dog inside, a Doberman
Pinscher. A tag hung from its black leather collor. Rex, it said.
Missy told her the dog's name was Rex despite being a female. When Sam asked why Missy gave her this name, the girl said, "Because she's a king, and Rex means king. Don't you know anything?"
Sam
opened the cage and examined the dog, unafraid because the cultist robe
provided her protection from the dog's aggression. She wondered
what would happen if she took off the robe, but wasn't going to conduct
that experiment to find out.
An experiment she did run: she told the dog to sit. It complied without any change in expression. Sam continued to try her luck.
"Rex, be nice," she said.
The
dog started wagging its docked tail, and began a relaxed panting. The
simple command restored it to some semblance of its former personality.
"Follow me," she ordered Rex. "We're going to go find whoever did this to you."

