Horrific Shorts: Zombie Edition
Chapter 1558: Story 1558: The Child’s Note
CHAPTER 1558: STORY 1558: THE CHILD’S NOTE
The single note hung in the air, vibrating through bone and blood.
It was not bright like Elara’s lullaby, nor jagged like the Unborn’s hymn. It was raw—untamed, unshaped, a sound that carried both wound and wonder. The lattice above shivered, not from strain, but from transformation. The chains that had cracked began knitting in strange new patterns, jagged arcs of fire weaving with threads of shadow, imperfect yet unbreakable.
Kael felt it surge through his veins. The boy’s song was not binding them to light or darkness—it was binding them to truth. His truth. Their truth. Every scar, every sin, every flicker of hope or despair wove into the lattice without shame.
Elara gasped, pressing the child against her chest as if she could shield him from the power spilling out of him. But even she could not contain it. The song leapt from him into every survivor, searing them with the weight of what they were.
The farmer collapsed to his knees, clutching the dirt. “I see them again... but not as ash. My sons... they smile at me.” Tears streamed down his face, neither grief nor joy, but both. His light steadied.
The widow’s voice cracked as she whispered into the binding. “They forgive me... even when I cannot forgive myself.” Her glow brightened, no longer trembling but fierce.
Even the scarred woman froze. Her spear wavered as she staggered back, her thoughts bleeding into the lattice. She saw herself in the boy’s song—not only her rage, but the moment she had first taken up a blade, trembling with fear, desperate not to be powerless again. Her mouth twisted as if in pain, but her hand lowered.
Kael met her eyes, seeing not surrender but recognition.
The Gate shuddered. The Unborn’s laughter fractured, carrying an edge of fury. “This is not song. This is noise. Weakness dressed as defiance. I will drown it.”
Its voice surged, a tidal wave of shadow pressing against the boy’s note. But this time, the survivors did not collapse. They bent, they screamed, but they did not break.
Kael staggered forward, lifting his fused blade high. Its glow now pulsed in rhythm with the child’s note. He bared his teeth, shouting into the binding. “We are not perfect. We are not pure. But we are ours. That is enough!”
The survivors roared with him, their broken voices rising into a jagged harmony. The lattice flared, sparks raining across the battlefield like falling stars.
For the first time, the fissure shrank—not by force, not by chains, but by the song itself pushing the shadow back.
The boy slumped in Elara’s arms, exhausted, his glow faint but steady. His voice was a whisper now, barely more than breath, but it carried through them all: “Not chains... not silence... us.”
The Gate wailed, the Unborn retreating a step into its abyss. Yet its presence lingered, cold and patient. “Sing then, little spark. Sing until your throat bleeds. I will be waiting when it does.”
Kael tightened his grip on the boy’s hand. His chest ached with fire and fatigue, but his voice remained steady.
The child was no longer just their burden. He was their leader.
And his song had only begun.