Though
his eyes were still thick with sleep, Tom couldn’t help but notice
the massive hole in the middle of his front yard the second he opened
the garage door. He scowled, angrily retying his bathrobe. A blue
Lexus hummed past, indifferent to the sudden blight on his grass.
“Son-of-a-bitch,”
Tom spat. “Gophers.”
He
bitterly grabbed his trash can and dragged it to the end of the
drive, staring in disgust at the unsightly hole the entire time. He’d
just reseeded the entire damn yard in the spring, shortly after he
and his wife bought the place. A whole weekend of labor undone by a
worthless, wily rodent.
After
dropping off the trash, he gingerly tip-toed across the lawn to the
hole. Morning dew flitted from the grass with each step, dampening
his slippers and dotting his bare ankles with tiny drops. Hands on
hips, he surveyed the damage. Surrounded by a ring of unearthed soil,
it resembled a recently-erupted volcano. Tom peered into the
cavernous black abyss, thinking the mother of all gophers must be
living beneath his property.
“Say,
Tom,” a familiar voice greeted from behind. “How goes the
battle?”
Tom
turned to see his neighbor, Herb Blisard, jogging in-place on the
sidewalk. The old man flashed a congenial smile as he removed his
earphones and wiped sweat from his forehead. He was dressed in the
same too-snug blue sweats and Oregon Ducks T-shirt he wore for every
morning run.
“The
battle?”
He replied as he aimed a rigid finger at the vandalism in the middle
of his yard. “That’s how the battle goes. Goddamn gophers.”
Herb
stopped jogging and slowly exhaled, regarding the hole with a serious
face.
Tom
slowly shook his head and sighed. “Can you believe it? In a
neighborhood like this? Homes starting at 400K, a Lexus in every
driveway, a barbecue on every patio, in-ground sprinklers, and all it
takes for my property to look like White Trash Central is a
pea-brained rodent. Now I gotta run to Home Depot to get rid of the
little bastards.”
As
if on cue, Reggie Bannister, a neighbor from two houses down, sped by
in his silver Lexus, throwing a friendly hand out the window on his
way to work.
“Gophers?”
Herb mused, stepping up onto the lawn to join Tom. Also putting his
hands on his hips, he studied the cavernous hole for several seconds.
“It ain’t gophers, Tom. Hole’s too big for gophers. Looks like
you’ve got zombies.”
Tom’s
eye grew huge. “Zombies? How could I have zombies?”
Herb
chuckled knowingly. “First time home-owner, huh? Let me guess…your
realtor conveniently forgot to inform you this neighborhood was
developed on top of sacred burial ground.”
Tom
stared back dumbly.
“Yeah,
that figures. Hard to sell homes built atop dead people, but it
doesn’t instill much trust in your agent, does it?”
Tom’s
face sank as he stared ominously into the hole. “Zombies. This is
worse than gophers.” He buried his face in his hands.
Herb
slapped him on the back. “Not really, Tom. Gophers usually burrow
back into the ground only to pop up somewhere else in your yard. Just
one gopher can dig dozens of tiny holes. Zombies pop out once. So
unless you’ve got a whole nest of ‘em under your yard, you’re
actually pretty lucky.” He nodded down to the hole. “All you
gotta do is find this
one and get rid of it. You don’t want something like that hanging
around. Lowers the property value.”
“What
makes you think a zombie would stick arou-”
A
sudden, ear-piercing shriek erupted from inside Tom’s home.
Panicked,
Tom gripped Herb’s arm, noticing the gate leading to the back yard
was ajar. “Oh, God. Nicole!”
Herb
suddenly pulled a handgun from the waistline of his too-snug sweats
and charged forward. “Come on!”
Feeling
helpless, Tom sprinted after his neighbor, following him into the
back yard.
Both
suddenly stopped.
On
the patio, gurgling and groaning as it pounded the sliding-glass door
with moist, gelatinous hands, was the pasty gray corpse that had
clawed its way out of Tom's front yard. Strings of yellow drool
dangled from its jaws. Chunks of soil and flesh fell from its bones
and plopped to the concrete with each strike of the glass. Tom’s
wife, wearing the fuzzy pink robe he gave her a few Christmases ago,
stood screaming on the other side of the door, hands flailing in
terror.
“Nicole!”
Tom cried.
The
corpse reared its head toward Herb and Tom. Both eyes were gone;
oozing black sockets stared back. Its mouth fell open as it suddenly
shambled toward them, knocking over the gas grill Tom spent an hour
cleaning last weekend.
Herb
drew careful aim, cocked the hammer and squeezed the trigger. The
blast was deafening, scaring a few sparrows from some nearby trees.
The ghoul’s head exploded, spattering the nearby wall of Tom’s
$400K house with blood, brains and shattered skull. The rest of the
body collapsed in a wet heap.
Slowly
exhaling, Herb lowered the gun and tucked it back into his sweats.
“There...problem solved, buddy.”
As
Nicole offered them both an exasperated look before throwing the
curtains closed, Tom said, “Thanks, Herb, I appreciate it. But what
if I got a bunch
of the ’em under my yard?”
Herb
clapped Tom’s shoulder with one hand and patted the butt of his gun
with the other. “My friend, not every lawn tool can be found at
Home Depot.” He looked over and noticed the nearby pond Tom had
recently spent a weekend digging. “Though I do suggest getting some
fencing for that thing. Goddamn racoons ate all the Koi in my pond.”
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