Far Horizons: Tales of Sci-Fi, Fantasy and Horror. Issue #11 February 2015 | Page 15

land, just as we had on Earth. After repeated pleas to stop were ignored, the Taque had enough. The Taque were a highly intelligent and curious race. Seeking out new cultures and planets to learn as much as they could. They coexisted with the life around them and were shocked by the humans’ treatment of the planet they shared. Without warning they attacked by contaminating the water with a genetically engineered virus that only affected humans. The Taque didn’t foresee the virus continuing to evolve, after the death of the host, into a multi-organism entity. An entity that reanimated the dead it inhabited. Very contagious dead. Zombies, real zombies, not science fiction, but reality. They didn’t talk or try to eat your brains but they did want to infect as many as possible, to multiply and survive. Just like any other living organism. They were like jellyfish. Made up of many individual organisms to create a collective whole. They weren’t evil or malevolent, but they were deadly. I stand alone. Sometimes I wonder if I’m the only one left. There is nothing around me but desolation and death, destruction and despair. I look at what used to be my city. A burned out wreckage of a once thriving metropolis. I struggle to hold on to my sanity as the things I’ve seen, and the things I’ve done, creep into my mind. They’re all just a blur of fear and horror. As I stand here, I can’t help but think back, to the beginning, back when life was normal. It started with a genetically modified virus, modified to kill. It was germ warfare on a scale unseen before, with side effects only heard of in horror stories. The Taque wanted the humans gone from the planet we both colonized. There was peace at first but human habits hadn’t changed since leaving a world we destroyed behind. It wasn’t long before we started strip mining, clear cutting, polluting the air, water and When people started to reanimate, pandemonium broke out. A virus that was killing us was bad enough but the dead trying to kill us was beyond comprehension. You had to be careful how you killed them as well, as one touch, one drop of blood and you were next. Luckily the collective controlling the body was simple and unintelligent, going on instinct alone. All they wanted was to touch people. It was easy to trap them and burn them, destroying the virus. However people continued to infect others without knowing, so the virus spread quickly. I lost everyone, everything I ever loved or cared about. I was away at college when my family contracted it from the tainted water. My mother, father, brother, his wife and their unborn child all gone before I returned home. We were