The Dead Come for Us
The Dead Come for Us
Author: Isaac
Chapter 1
Author: Isaac
last update2026-06-13 19:48:04

‎ James McAllister surveyed his family the same way he’d once surveyed a bombed-out intersection in Fallujah: as assets, liabilities, and vulnerable perimeters. Old habits, etched into bone.

‎His wife, Lola, had shared his bed for eighteen years. A marriage sealed on a forty-eight-hour leave just before his second tour. She was born and bred in a rural logging country with a hard, logical mind that served as the perfect counterweight to his analytical paranoia. She wasn’t squeamish. She could field-strip a Glock in under a minute, though she hated what the proficiency implied about the man she loved.

‎Then came the variables. The teenagers.

‎17 year old Isaac was a broad-shouldered, sullen carbon copy of his father, minus the discipline. He burned to prove he was a man, a dangerous hunger in a crisis. And Rose, two years younger, moved through the house like a ghost with perfect hearing. She could pick out the rattle of a loose fan belt or the click of a distant latch long before anyone else registered a sound.

‎For fifteen years since Jame’s medical discharge, their life on the quiet cul-de-sac of Whispering Pines had been a performance. High school football. Backyard barbecues. Saturday lawn mowing.

But beneath the suburban script, Mac still ran the household like a forward operating base. The pantry was stocked six months deep with MREs and canned goods. Every car kept a full tank. Every person had memorized their escape routes, their rally points, their bug-out drills.

‎Lola called it therapy. Isaac called it paranoia. Rose just watched and listened.

‎On this particular Saturday morning, the performance ended at 07:12.

‎James was in the garage, wiping down the carburetor of their portable generator. The air was thick, heavy, pressurized, smelling of old oil and the cloying sweetness of an early summer heatwave.

‎Then the background noise of the world simply… stopped.

‎No lawnmowers. No distant hum of the interstate. No birdsong from the oaks lining the street.

‎The silence was absolute. And completely wrong.

‎“James.”

‎Lola stood in the garage doorway, her cell phone held out like a broken offering. Her face had gone ashen. “The bars are gone. No service. Not even SOS. I tried the landline. The fiber-optic box under the stairs is flashing a solid red.”

‎He didn’t answer. He rose slowly, his six-two frame casting a long shadow across the tool racks, and walked to the edge of the driveway.

‎The vibration came first, deep in his boots, before it reached his ears. A low, steady, bass-heavy thumping.

‎Thug-thug-thug-thug.

‎Three CH-53E Super Stallion helicopters broke through the overcast from the north, flying impossibly low. They cleared the treeline by no more than two hundred feet, their dark fuselages stripped of external fuel tanks: light, fast, and desperate. They screamed south toward the naval weapons station and vanished.

‎“Get the kids,” Mac said. His voice had flattened into the dead cadence of a squad leader walking into an ambush. “Now, Lola.” ‎

‎“James, what the hell”

‎“Lola. Heavy boots. Long sleeves. Jeans. Kitchen. Three minutes. Move.”

‎The authority in his voice cut through her rising panic. She turned and sprinted upstairs. James walked to the steel locker bolted to the garage wall, spun the combination, and yanked it open. He pulled out the Remington 870 tactical shotgun, two pistols, a serrated knife, an entrenching tool, and a three-foot steel crowbar.

‎Ninety seconds later, Lola, Isaac, and Rose stood in the kitchen. Isaac looked vaguely annoyed. Rose was trembling, her eyes darting to the windows.

‎“Fill every container, every pot, every bathtub with water,” James ordered, tossing the crowbar to Isaac. “Municipal pressure will drop within the hour. Move.”

‎“Dad, it’s just a cell tower—”

‎“Listen,” Rose whispered.

‎She had gone rigid. Her head cocked toward the open window, her preternatural focus locked onto something beyond the street.

‎“Dad,” she said, her voice barely audible. “Listen to the highway.”

‎Through the dead, eerie silence came a sound that made Mac’s skin crawl. Not an explosion. Not a crash. A continuous, grinding shriek of tortured metal and splintering glass, a multi-car pileup on Route 286. And beneath it, rising like a tide: a chorus of distant, synchronized screaming that sounded less like human fear and more like an arena of ecstatic sports fans. ‎

‎Then came the sound closer to home.

‎Wood splintering.

‎Mac crossed to the living room window and peeled back the blinds. Down the street, the heavy privacy fence at the Miller house didn’t just break, it exploded outward from the impact of a surging human mass.

‎A wave of figures boiled into the cul-de-sac. They didn’t stumble or collapse. They ran at a horrifying, unnatural velocity. Limbs flailing, bodies careening off parked cars and asphalt, only to spring up and keep going. A single, rabid organism moving from house to house.

‎Toward James McAllister’s house.

‎“Away from the windows!” He roared, slamming a 12-gauge shell into Remington's chamber with a violent clack-clack. “Isaac, basement door! Lola, behind me!”

‎The front lawn vanished. The screaming reached the porch.

‎The heavy oak front door groaned and cracked inward from a massive, concussive blow. The deadbolt held, but the wood splintered and burst apart. Through the widening fissure, a pair of milky-white, bloodshot eyes locked onto James. A jaw unhinged. A deafening, high-pitched screech vibrated through the drywall.

‎Before James could pull the trigger, the living room picture window shattered.

A sprinting figure smeared with glass and its own pressurized blood launched headfirst through the opening, its teeth chattering and snapping in a frantic, rapid rhythm as it aimed straight for Rose.

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    The world tipped into a void of white heat.As the concrete foundations of the control tower collapsed inward, the third-floor routing room strained at its structural joints, peeling away to begin its sickeningly deliberate fall toward the eastern tracks. Concrete dust sprayed through widening cracks in the walls, blinding them, making their throats scratchy and dry."Hold onto something!" Mac yelled, his boots slipping off the crumbling floor. He jammed his shoulder into a bolted steel relay rack, digging his heels in, and wrapped his arms around Rose like a clamp. Lola slammed against the base of the control console, clutching an iron cable conduit. Isaac wasn't as fortunate; his feet flew out from under him and he began sliding rapidly down the increasing slope of the concrete floor toward the empty window that overlooked the blaze below."Dad!" Isaac screamed, his fingers scraping at the linoleum before his legs dangled over the void. Mac let go of the rack, his own descent be

  • Chapter 9

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  • Chapter 8

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  • Chapter 7

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  • Chapter 6

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  • Chapter 5

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