Walking. Endlessly walking. Nothing better to do. I spent the night in the remnants of a church, somewhere in the city. It doesn't matter which city. They all look the same now. Empty of the living and swarming with the undead. I walk, and see some of the others. Everyone is wandering around aimlessly, looking for food. None of us can find anything to eat. The stray dogs and cats are too quick for us, and the birds and other animals are forever out of reach. That's life, well, that's existence for us.
Once upon a time, I had a name. What was my name? Sholonda Addams was my maiden name but it doesn't matter anymore. Facts like being black, female, forty years of age and a wife and a mother stop mattering the moment I stopped being human and became what I am today. When news broke out about the dead coming back to life and devouring the living, I was a major doubter. It wasn't until the City of Houston, Texas, fell, that I began to believe...
"We have to leave," said my husband Lincoln Browne, and he took my arm, while our son Wilson looked at us expectantly. We piled into the Rav4 and took off. We skipped the highway, and took the backroads. We managed to make it as far as the Appalachian Trail, to the American wilderness, since we'd learned that fewer people meant fewer zombies. We made our way there, and that's when everything started to go wrong.
One night, they came, the men with the guns. They wanted what we had. I pleaded with Lincoln to give them what they wanted, but he refused. The men with the guns shot all three of us. I remember crying, horrified, as my son Wilson died before my very eyes. We went down, all three of us. When I came to, I was...changed. I didn't know that any human being who dies will rise as one of the ravenous undead unless he or she has been properly disposed of.
The gunmen shot Lincoln and Wilson in the head, ending them forever. I took a bullet to the chest, which killed me, but hours later I came back as one of the undead. I stood there, looking at my husband and son, and I wanted to grieve for them but I couldn't. The living know grief, the dead know nothing, and the undead know only hunger. It was hunger which drove me to track down the three gunmen to their camp, and I found them, after walking for days.
I bit them, all three of them, and they died, and came back. They joined the horde. Male and female, pale and dark, friend or foe, any dead person whose brain hasn't been destroyed will rise as one of the ravenous ones. We swarmed the great cities of America, Canada and Mexico. In time, the zombie outbreak spread to Europe, Africa and Asia, and even Australia and much of Oceania. No place on earth was left untouched by the zombie plague.
Today, I venture into one of my favorite places, the remnants of a church. I sit in a pew and bow my head, something I remember doing often as a living, breathing human woman. When I was alive, I was an avid churchgoer, which isn't surprising since everyone knows how religious black folks are in the southern United States. I went to church with my parents and siblings and later, with my husband and son. We had just come home from church one Sunday afternoon when news broke out about the zombie apocalypse.